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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

The pain control conundrum makes its mark in one vet's painful case

October 29, 2007 / (15) comments


The use of pain control medication in pets seems like a no-brainer to most of us—especially when it comes to seriously excruciating orthopedic surgeries. One US vet, however, maintains that it’s his prerogative to dispense with such niceties. Unfortunately for him, taking this stance in his practice brought on a complaint against his license from the owners of one of his patients.

The owners contend their dog was in severe pain after bone surgery, and yet this vet implemented no analgesics in his standard surgical protocol. They allege that his tactics represent a failure to provide a reasonable standard of care, given that vets everywhere use pain medication routinely for less painful procedures.

The doc, for his part, maintains that pain relief was not necessary in this case. He also eschews pain meds for spays and other surgeries for which “city vets” routinely dose their patients. He contends that his veterinary license grants him the freedom to choose whether to administer pain meds or not.

The Board of Veterinary Medicine in his state respectfully disagreed—and yanked his license to prove their point. But he’s fighting back. He’s taking the Board to task for pulling his license when there are no uniformly established guidelines for pain relief in veterinary medicine.

OK so the guy’s right on that last score. Indeed, the profession has issued no edict on how pain relief is to be applied. Add that to the fact that pain protocols for pets have been widely used for a mere ten years and you can see why some old-timers (a designation for which he undoubtedly qualifies) are feeling somewhat put-upon by their younger colleagues.

Vet medicine has changed dramatically in the last couple of decades. I’ve addressed that point in zillions of posts. And here’s one area where the change is exacting its toll on older vets: rapid evolution in the use of new drugs and procedures requires the ability to react rapidly to their use. But it’s hard to bring someone who’s been practicing for almost sixty years into line with the youngsters in the face of this newly fast-paced profession.

His attorney (one of my Penn profs, incidentally), argues that without established pain protocols there’s no way for a vet to know how things need to be done. He argues that this doc is being unfairly scapegoated for his antiquated ways.

Respectfully, however, I beg to differ. After all, there’s no established protocol for spays or setting bones. Do it differently than most of your colleagues in the US and you can bet that if someone complains you’ll be taken to task. Medicine is like that. It’s all about “standards of care.” If you don’t keep up with modern standards, you’re leaving yourself open to serious scrutiny should something go wrong.

And pain control is no different. Just because the AVMA (American Veterinary Medical Association) doesn’t go out of its way to tell you how you should push drugs doesn’t mean you have the right to pick and choose whether to keep up with the veterinary Joneses on any given medical issue. It’s not your call. It’s a numbers game. And if you don’t know what the numbers are, that’s your fault. Ignorance is no excuse—especially when it comes to medicine.

Predictably, most of the specialists I know are on my side. They have a vested interest in making sure the standard of care keeps rising. Generalists, however, are more likely to be appalled that a Board can refuse you the right to practice over a seemingly arbitrary standard of care issue.

Interestingly, this is a defining case in vet medicine. Standards of care have been used very generally in the past to determine negligence in vet medicine (as in, did you secure an incision with suture material or not?). With this case, pain is emerging as an issue that may well mark the beginning of the end for vets who choose to practice their old ways.

To me, it makes sense that how we handle pain paints the line between old ways and new. It speaks to our willingness to acknowledge that animal welfare means more than just keeping pets alive after injury or illness. It admits that our role is larger now that we have more tools at our disposal, and underlines the fact that minimizing suffering, by whatever means necessary, is an integral part of that role.

No longer do we live in mid-twentieth century America where animals inhabit our world as pure luxury items or for our most basic utility. This is 2007, where pets are more than mere toys and industrial-scale animal agriculture is just starting to recognize that their profit margins might eventually succumb to similar attitudes. After all, would you want to drink milk from a cow whose owners didn’t see fit to block a nerve before carving out her foot abscess?

So you see, this issue has legs. That’s why I’m gratified to see it coming to a head, even if one otherwise competent vet has to pay the price for this welcome change.

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COMMENTS (15)
1
by on 10/31/2007 04:46pm

Excellent points, M, but I understand the jury's still out on waterboarding--in legal terms, that is.

I'd like to add another link to your AAHA guidelines. The American Association of Feline Practiitoners also just came up with a list of guidelines:
http://www.aafponline.org/resources/practice_guide...

If that's what it takes to get docs on board with pain meds than that's exactly what this profession is going to make sure they get.

2
by on 10/31/2007 01:54pm

Two things:

As a practicing veterinary surgeon, I feel it is cruel and infantile to try to use pain as a restraining agent postoperatively (and I treat several broken legs a week, 52 weeks a year). The notion that a little pain serves its purpose is false, and is a mentality that deserves to be tossed on the trashheap of history, right along with bloodletting. The stoicism of animals in no way diminishes the magnitude of their suffering. All of our biological knowledge shows that all higher animals (and, frankly, most lower animals as well) feel the same pain pathways, and pain has just as significant deleterious effects as it does in humans. This means injuries and illnesses hurt, and they hurt for more than a few hours, and not treating the pain is as cruel as waterboarding.

Expanding on the studies in children and pain. Before the 80s, certain open-chest surgeries were performed in day-old infants, without significant pain control medications. These children showed mortality rates of 25-30%. None of these children showed signs of pain, so were not treated. One group decided to start treating the children for pain anyway, and found the mortality rate dropped to less than 5%. The conclusion: 25% of children were dying of pain - and without showing any signs. Our pets are the same. I gurantee that a large proportion of the "anesthetic deaths" veterinarians see are not "reactions" to anesthesia, but inadequate pain controll that leads to their dying the same was as those children did: of pain.

The second thing: the American Animal Hospital Association has developed Pain Management Guidlines for Dogs and Cats, you can find it on their website: https://secure.aahanet.org/eweb/startpage.aspx?sit...

3
by on 10/31/2007 08:13am

Lis: I'm familiar with some of these studies. Even more scary than the studies that demonstrate more rapid healing when kids are dosed with pain meds are those that show increased mortality (as in death) in babies not given pain meds. Imagine open heart surgery without a pain protocol--we used to do it in infants. No wonder so many died.

4
by on 10/30/2007 08:56pm

In one of my classes this semester(AS in veterinary technology), one of the areas we focused on was the fact that the CNS in dogs and cats is very similar to that of humans and their brains register painful stimuli in the same manner that ours do. The use of subjects other than humans to test the effectiveness of new pain meds in their preliminary stages of development would also seem to lend itself to this idea, would it not?

Aren't veterinarians required to obtain a certain number of CE credits each yeat like veterinary technicians are, or does it vary by state? It seems like pain management would be an area that was focused on, as pain is not conducive to optimal healing in both animals and humans, which we touched on this semester as well.

5
by on 10/30/2007 06:14pm

It used to be believed that human infants and small children didn't need pain relief, for much the same reason--they didn't show it like adults did for the same injuries, so they must not be feeling it. More recently, though, real studies of infants and pain relief have found that infants given pain relief for injuries and surgical procedures heal faster than infants who are not given pain relief.

6
by on 10/30/2007 03:36pm

Tracey: Too true on the pain and activity thing. Problem is, I hate to know that there's a possibility of pain and that the dog's just too big a spaz to medicate it. As you point out, if you give him pain relief he'll work through that splint in no time--or bound everywhere on it like it's not even there. I use an awful lot of sedatives in these cases--along with pain meds. I think it all comes back to when I was a kid and no one ever gave me anything more than Tylenol for my broken arm. Sure I was a trooper. Everyone said they couldn't believe I'd broken my arm--I was so quiet about my pain. Years later, all I remember is how horribly I suffered--for days. I don't wish that on anyone. Conseqently, I think, I'm tough on pain in practice.

7
by on 10/30/2007 03:27pm

It is well known thta animals tend to maks illnesses and injuries in order not to appear vulnerable. But I'm not sure we can say this is becuae they feel the pain but pretend not to or wheterh natural selection has favored those individuals will a very high pain threshold. I suspect it is the later - doesn't mean pain medication is not appropriate in many situations, but probably not as often or as long as the average person.

But it is often difficult to tell when an animal is in pain because they may not show it the same way we do. I had a dog who had a slab fracture of a back molar. It wasn't identified until he had a dental checkup with a certified veterinary dentist (his regular vet hadn't caught it though he had early checkups). He was about eight years old and had slowed down considerably - I thought it was normal aging. After having a root canal on the affected tooth the difference in his behavior was remarkable - he acted like a much younger dog.

8
by on 10/30/2007 02:30pm

Eeesh - Lis, that guy Bernie is making no sense at all............I'm glad you stayed the course! If there's one thing I have no patience for, it's people who talk about how divided this country is and then proceed tolabel and categorize subject matter to make a point. It's so simplistic. Everything must have a category (Red/Blue, City/Rural....) or else it's just 'too hard' to talk about.

9
by on 10/30/2007 02:08pm

Dogs and cats tend to hide pain and other signs of weakness because in the wild, concealing weakness is a survival characteristic. I don't thinkyou can safely conclude from the fact that a dog is not showing pain, that the dog is not feeling pain in response to things that we know cause considerable pain in humans (such as broken bones or major abdominal surgery, just to pick two random examples.)

Over on the Pet Connection, there's a discussion of this case and the issues flowing from it that you might find interesting:
http://www.petconnection.com/blog/2007/10/25/do-co...

10
by on 10/30/2007 01:41pm

It's just a hard call... not being there to know more about the individual procedure, the type of owner (we know there are some crazies out there) and the husbandry sitiuation of the dog. I have treated dogs with broken bones and not given pain meds because the dog did not appear painful or if I though that it was a case where pain would protect the dog from further injury. If a person sprains an ankle, they can take a few aspirin and willingly rest it so not to make it worse. If you take away all the pain in an acutely injured animal, they may make the injury worse. Pain, to degree, and at certain times serves a purpose. We also must remember that some of these drugs do have harmful side effects. Each case should be evaluated individually and without being there, I shouldn't pass judgement on this vet.

11
by on 10/30/2007 09:00am

Let me say that I deal with several broken legs a year. Basically greyhounds that have broken a leg while racing. These dogs get no pain meds until the adoption group gets them to the vet. This could be as long as a week after the break happened. This practice boils my blood. However the dogs seem to handle it very well. Even after surgery to fix the leg. I rarely keep them on pain meds longer than 2 days. They just don't seem to require it. I use the rule that says if they are using the leg it can't hurt so much they need pain meds. I've had a dog who had all but 5 of his teeth removed because his gums were rotted away. The next day he was eating pork neck bones ( by his choice ) A bowl of ground chicken was right by the bones. He chose the bones. When we have dogs spayed or neutered rarely do they get pain meds after the day of surgery. Again they just don't seem to need them. Running through the house is proof enough to me. That they are feeling fine. If they do show signs of discomfort then they get the meds but it is rare.

12
by on 10/30/2007 06:16am

Even if he gets his license back, I feel sorry for the poor patients whose owners may not be aware of his practices. Just as with human doctors, vets should hav an obligation to stay current with medications, practices, etc. If not, they deserve to have their license pulled. Now I am very glad I go to a vet that is current with things for my cats. May cost more, but they receive quality care.

13
by on 10/30/2007 12:29am

I know that in human medicine it is now established that pain slows healing. I don't know if animal studies have been done in this area, but I would expect it is ture for animals as well.

14
by on 10/29/2007 09:08pm

Practice guidelines (I speak mainly with reference to human medicine) are entirely different than the "standard of care" concept. Practice guidelines usually have some scientific backing such as published studies that show when certain treatments are used the outcomes are better than if they are not followed. The standard of care is a somewhat more nebulous (though no less real) concept which mainly operates on the consensus of the community. The community is somewhat geographically defined, so the standard (one could also call it the "accepted professional routine") might be different in different areas. So this vet may have some wiggle room in this area, but providing pain medications after surgey DOES seem to be setting the bar pretty low.

15
by on 10/29/2007 08:35pm

It seems bizarre and somewhat creepy that a vet wouldn't want to at least attempt to offer relief of pain to a suffering animal. I certainly would not take my animals to someone with that attitude. Then again, you might be surprised to find out how many docs who treat PEOPLE don't even think pain releif is important. I've been refused pain meds because "Pain is a part of life...". Ugh. Won't go there again.

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About fully vetted

Patty Khuly, VMD, MBA

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Dr. Khuly is a former petMD blogger and small animal veterinarian in Miami, Florida, where she practices medicine at Sunset Animal Clinic and serves on the board of the South Florida Veterinary Medical Association. She is a graduate of Wellesley College, the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, and The Wharton School of Business.

As a significant sideline, she writes...a lot. She authors pet health columns for USA Today, The Miami Herald and Vetstreet. She also writes a popular monthly column for Veterinary Practice News and serves as regular contributor to Veterinary Economics, The Bark, and the Veterinary News Network.

Dr. Khuly lives in South Miami with her brood of hens, goats, dogs, cats...and humans.

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