退伍军人事务部研究和发展办公室的疼痛组合。

A. Kusiak
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This change can be attributed to the increased interest in pain research within VA's scientific and clinical communities brought about by the unique chronic pain management needs of Veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan and the collaborative effort between VA's pain research community and ORD to spotlight pain research. Pain research in ORD appropriately spans the translational research spectrum and includes basic/foundational research mainly in animal models, epidemiology to determine the distribution of various painful conditions in the VA, pain diagnosis, management and treatment of pain, underlying causes of chronic pain including the transition from the acute to chronic state, adverse events associated with pain management, and health services-level research. 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引用次数: 4

摘要

对于退伍军人事务部(VA)的疼痛研究来说,这是一个激动人心的时刻。在研究与发展办公室(ORD)的康复研究与发展服务部担任科学项目经理的七年里,我目睹了VA疼痛投资组合中项目数量和资助研究人员数量的增加。2009年,大约有57个疼痛研究项目。2015年7月,项目数量为109个,重要的是,在这段时间内,对疼痛研究的投资几乎增加了两倍。这一变化可归因于从伊拉克和阿富汗返回的退伍军人独特的慢性疼痛管理需求,以及退伍军人疼痛研究社区和ORD之间的合作努力,从而增加了退伍军人科学和临床社区对疼痛研究的兴趣。ORD的疼痛研究适当地跨越了转化研究的范围,包括主要在动物模型中的基础/基础研究、确定VA中各种疼痛状况分布的流行病学、疼痛诊断、疼痛管理和治疗、慢性疼痛的潜在原因(包括从急性到慢性状态的过渡)、与疼痛管理相关的不良事件以及卫生服务水平的研究。这篇社论涵盖了在VA进行的疼痛研究的创新和独特领域的一小部分,以及VA研究人员在疼痛社区中发挥的重要作用,VA参与机构间疼痛研究协调委员会(IPRCC)国家疼痛战略(NPS)证明了这一点。*疼痛管理:治疗患有慢性疼痛和共存疾病的退伍军人的挑战引发了人们对如何有效地照顾这些人的兴趣。以团队为基础的综合方法发挥了VA作为医疗保健系统的优势,包括在诊所为退伍军人看病的临床医生,他们也进行基本的卫生服务研究。这反映在大量与治疗相关的项目(n = 46)中,这些项目检查了锻炼和活动的有效性;补充疗法,包括电疗法(如经颅磁刺激)和瑜伽;并测试不同的药物治疗配方,不仅关注疼痛,还关注包括创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)、抑郁症、睡眠和物质使用障碍在内的共存疾病。治疗的重点包括减少对阿片类药物作为“去”药物的依赖,并检查其他形式的疼痛管理,让退伍军人在控制疼痛状况方面处于主导地位。*比较有效性研究:比较有效性研究强调“基于证据的实践”和“基于实践的证据”结果的重要性,是对哪些治疗应该有效以及哪些治疗实际上有效的现实检查。这些类型的研究是医疗保健系统所特有的,旨在改善护理的提供,最大限度地提高患者满意度,同时具有成本效益。这是一个非常适合退伍军人管理局的研究领域,也是退伍军人管理局卫生服务研究人员在该领域处于领先地位的领域。这些研究的结果改变了退伍军人事务部提供护理的方式。以证据为基础的实践研究的一个例子是退伍军人事务部采用针灸治疗慢性腰痛,而以实践为基础的证据研究的一个例子是对疼痛管理的阶梯式护理模型的持续评估。在这种情况下,结果建议重新安排“步骤”以使流程更高效和有效,包括轮换临床医生而不是让患者轮换通过“步骤”。比较有效性研究是确定有利于退伍军人的最佳实践的理想方法。*精准医疗:每个人都在谈论精准医疗,但退伍军人事务部的疼痛研究人员和临床医生实际上是在“走路”。…
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Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development's pain portfolio.
It is an exciting time for pain research at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). In the seven years that I have been a Scientific Program Manager in the Rehabilitation Research and Development Service in the Office of Research and Development (ORD), I have witnessed an increase in the number of projects and funded investigators within VA's pain portfolio. In 2009, there were approximately 57 projects on pain research. In July 2015, the number of projects was 109, and importantly, the investment in pain research almost tripled within this time span. This change can be attributed to the increased interest in pain research within VA's scientific and clinical communities brought about by the unique chronic pain management needs of Veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan and the collaborative effort between VA's pain research community and ORD to spotlight pain research. Pain research in ORD appropriately spans the translational research spectrum and includes basic/foundational research mainly in animal models, epidemiology to determine the distribution of various painful conditions in the VA, pain diagnosis, management and treatment of pain, underlying causes of chronic pain including the transition from the acute to chronic state, adverse events associated with pain management, and health services-level research. This editorial covers a fraction of the innovative and unique areas of pain research being conducted at the VA and the important role VA researchers play in the pain community, as evidenced by VA participation in the Interagency Pain Research Coordinating Committee (IPRCC) National Pain Strategy (NPS). * Pain management: The challenge of treating Veterans with chronic pain and coexisting conditions has sparked an interest in how to care for these individuals effectively. Team-based integrative approaches play up to VA's strengths as a healthcare system and include the clinicians who see Veterans in the clinic, who also conduct basic up to health services research. This is reflected in the high number of treatment-related projects (n = 46) examining the effectiveness of exercise and activity; complementary approaches, including electroceuticals (e.g., transcranial magnetic stimulation) and yoga; and testing different formulations of drug therapies focused not only on pain but also on coexisting conditions, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, sleep, and substance use disorders. The emphasis of treatment includes reduced dependence on opioids as "go to" drugs and examining alternate forms of pain management, putting the Veteran in the driver's seat in managing the painful condition. * Comparative-effectiveness research: Comparative-effectiveness studies emphasize the importance of "evidence-based practice" and "practice-based evidence" results and are reality checks as to what treatments should be effective and what treatments actually are effective. These types of studies are unique to healthcare systems and aim to improve the delivery of care and maximize patient satisfaction while being cost-effective. It is an area of research well-suited to the VA and an area in which the VA Health Services researchers are leaders in the field. Results from these studies change the way care is delivered at the VA. An example of evidence-based practice research is the adoption of acupuncture for chronic low back pain at the VA, while an example of practice-based evidence research is the ongoing assessment of the Stepped Care Model for pain management. In this case, results recommend the rearrangement of "steps" to make the process more efficient and effective, including rotating the clinicians versus having the patient rotate through the "steps." Comparative-effectiveness studies are an ideal way to determine best practices that benefit the Veteran. * Precision medicine: Everyone is talking about precision medicine, but VA pain researchers and clinicians are actually "walking the walk. …
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