An ER Kicks the Habit of Opioids for Pain
Lauren Khalifeh, a nurse and St. Joseph’s holistic coordinator, doing a treatment called pranic healing in the emergency room. The hospital has introduced protocols in the ER that seek to avoid opioids for common types of acute pain.
Jan Lucas, 75, playing a “therapy harp” in the ER. It is one of many alternative approaches that St. Joseph’s uses to ease pain.
Lauren Khalifeh, a nurse and St. Joseph’s holistic coordinator, doing a treatment called pranic healing in the emergency room. The hospital has introduced protocols in the ER that seek to avoid opioids for common types of acute pain.
Since Jan. 4, St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center’s emergency department, one of the country’s busiest, has been using opioids only as a last resort. For patients with common types of acute pain — migraines, kidney stones, sciatica, fractures — doctors first try alternative regimens that include nonnarcotic infusions and injections, ultrasound guided nerve blocks, laughing gas, even “energy healing” and a wandering harpist.
Scattered ERs around the country have been working to reduce opioids as a first-line treatment, but St. Joe’s, as it is known locally, has taken the efforts to a new level.
“St. Joe’s is on the leading edge,” said Dr. Lewis S. Nelson, a professor of emergency medicine at New York University School of Medicine, who sat on a panel that recommended recent opioid guidelines for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “But that involved a commitment to changing their entire culture.”
In doing so, St. Joe’s is taking on a challenge that is even more daunting than teaching new protocols to 79 doctors and 150 nurses. It must shake loose a longstanding conviction that opioids are the fastest, most surefire response to pain, an attitude held tightly not only by emergency department personnel, but by patients, too.
Pain is the chief reason nearly 75 percent of patients seek emergency treatment. The ER waiting rooms and corridors of St. Joe’s, where some 170,000 patients will be seen this year, are frequently pierced by high-pitched cries and anguished moans.
Jan Lucas, 75, playing a “therapy harp” in the ER. It is one of many alternative approaches that St. Joseph’s uses to ease pain.
Such pain can be quickly subdued with opioids — Percocet and Vicodin pills; intravenous morphine and Dilaudid. Most doctors say those drugs can’t be altogether replaced. In extreme emergencies — a broken bone jutting through skin; a bad burn; an acute sickle cell crisis — opioids provide effective, immediate relief.
But it is what happens after patients leave the ER that public health experts believe has contributed to a crisis of addiction in the United States. At discharge, patients are often given opioid prescriptions. Since the medication has kept their pain at bay, they seek refills from their primary doctors. Though many never become dependent, others do. And so although emergency physicians write not quite 5 percent of opioid prescriptions, ERs have been identified as a starting point on a patient’s path to opioid and even heroin addiction.
“Because we are often the first doctors to provide the patient with opioids for acute pain, we have set in their minds that it’s the right treatment,” said Dr. Nelson.
Mindful of the exponential rise in opioid addiction at his hospital’s doorstep, Dr. Mark Rosenberg, St. Joe’s chairman of emergency medicine, began asking two years ago whether it was possible to treat many patients who arrive in the ER without opioids. He sent Dr. LaPietra on a fellowship year to study pain management at specialty departments at St. Joe’s and other hospitals. She trained the St. Joe’s staff. The ER’s pharmacy stocked the alternative medications. Dr. Rosenberg alerted departments throughout the hospital to sustain the opioid-avoidant philosophy when seeing ER patients for follow-up visits.
So far the approach has proved effective. In five months, the hospital has reduced opioid use in the emergency department by 38 percent. St. Joe’s has treated about 500 acute pain patients with non-opioid protocols. About three-quarters of the efforts were successful. Mrs. Pitts, the patient whose neck and arm pain was alleviated by a trigger-point injection, went home with non-opioid patches. She told ER staff in a follow-up call that she didn’t need further medication.
St. Joe’s is even cautiously trying therapies not typically taught in medical school. A nurse practitioner is studying acupuncture for pain. And another nurse, Lauren Khalifeh, the hospital’s holistic coordinator, does a treatment called “pranic healing.”
One afternoon, Mrs. Khalifeh visited a brittle-thin older patient whose sciatica was so inflamed she could not rise from her chair. On a scale of one to 10, the woman, doubled over, said her pain was a 10.
Mrs. Khalifeh pulled up a chair. “I am going to sweep the energy,” she told the patient. She opened a bottle of saline water. “The salt will destroy the negative energy.”
Dr. LaPietra, hard-wired with scientific skepticism, observed from a corner.
The patient closed her eyes, placing hands on lap, palms up. Mrs. Khalifeh leaned intently toward her, sculpting the air in figure eights. She stirred and swirled the space, and then passed her hands over each other. Then she hovered a palm near the patient’s heart.
“Let’s do a check-in,”said Mrs. Khalifeh.
The patient slowly stood. She walked over to Dr. LaPietra, who watched, open-mouthed.
“Much better,” the patient said. “Now it’s a five.”
Mrs. Khalifeh continued for two more minutes. “It’s a three,” said the patient wonderingly, doing deep knee-bends in her leather pants.
The entire process took about six minutes.
Dr. LaPietra’s eyes glistened with tears.