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Prescribing for pain: Ethical considerations that should guide clinical practice Associate Professor Mark Boughey, St Vincent’s Melbourne

Approaching a patient & their problem: what guides your practice?

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Prescribing for pain: E thical considerations that should guide clinical practice Associate Professor Mark Boughey , St Vincent’s Melbourne. Approaching a patient & their problem: what guides your practice?. Today’s aim - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

Prescribing for pain: Ethical considerations that should guide clinical practice

Associate Professor Mark Boughey, St Vincent’s Melbourne

Page 3: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

Today’s aim• Demonstrate how you can frame practice and decision making within a

clinical ethical basis• Think about the elements that come into play – make you conscious of

what you may already be doing• Use pain prescribing as an exemplar

Page 4: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

Why pain:• Complex medical problem• Complex interplay between peripheral & central NS• Complex interplay between nociceptive, neuropathic and

psychological/existential• Dealing with a variety of distinct pain entities-acute, chronic,

progressive/palliative• Treatment modalities are multiple and come with risk/benefits that vary

depending on what you are treating

Page 7: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

What does the patient want?

What is going to help?

What might hinder or harm?

Who gets what?

Autonomy

Beneficence

Non Maleficence

Justice

Patient viewsHistoryExpectationsIssues

My general approach to ethical considerations……

EvidenceGuidance docsConsensus of opinionExperienceKnowledge

Legal/illegalScope of practiceSystem supportsAvailability

Page 8: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

What does the patient want?

What is going to help?

What might hinder or harm?

Who gets what?

Autonomy

Beneficence

Non Maleficence

Justice

My approach to ethical considerations when prescribing for pain ……

Page 9: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

What does the patient want?

What is going to help?

What might hinder or harm?

Who gets what?

Autonomy

Beneficence

Non Maleficence

Justice

Patient viewsHistoryExpectationsIssues

My approach to ethical considerations when prescribing for pain ……

Page 10: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

What does the patient want?

What is going to help?

What might hinder or harm?

Who gets what?

Autonomy

Beneficence

Non Maleficence

Justice

My approach to ethical considerations when prescribing for pain ……

EvidenceGuidance docsConsensus of opinionExperienceKnowledge

Page 11: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

What does the patient want?

What is going to help?

What might hinder or harm?

Who gets what?

Autonomy

Beneficence

Non Maleficence

Justice

My approach to ethical considerations when prescribing for pain ……Legal/illegalScope of practiceSystem supportsAvailability

Page 12: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

What does it all mean?

Page 14: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

Context

Competence

Creativity

Flexibility

Basic skills

Knowing when to do what

How to cope when things go wrong

New ways to solve new problems

Page 15: Approaching a patient & their  problem:  what guides your  practice?

Prescribing for pain: Ethical considerations that should guide clinical practice

Associate Professor Mark Boughey, St Vincent’s Melbourne