Healthy African American Families Phase II 
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Women in Pain Conference

2nd Annual CME Women in Pain Conference: Gender Matters

Building Bridges to Optimum Health 

 

Course Objectives:

 

 

Upon completion of the conference, participants will be able to:

1.      Gain insight into the personal experiences of women living with pain and the history of the Women in Pain Movement.

2.      Describe results of scientific studies and reports on gender differences in the experience of pain.

3.      Review current pain management practices.

4.      Discuss the importance of gender differences in interpersonal and professional communications.

5.      Identify opportunities for advocacy that can improve treatment for women in pain.

6.      Identify complementary and alternative therapies for pain control.

7.      Discuss the impact of chronic pain on family, friends and work relationships.

8.      Review how depression can adversely impact chronic pain recovery.

9.      Discuss the unique challenges caregivers of people with chronic pain face. 

10.  Review prescription practices that pose barriers to care for chronic pain patients.

Statement of Need

In 1998, a conference was held at the National Institutes of Health on Gender and. Pain. One of the key findings was that women experience more pain than men.  Since then there has been recognition that women also are treated differently in society, in the workplace, by our legal system and by healthcare providers. Often health care providers fail to provide timely and best pain treatment, but through lack of awareness and research, disparities continue. Women in pain and others can benefit from information on standard and complementary treatments for pain as well as coaching on how to communicate with physicians and other providers.

The goal of this conference is to bring together women in pain with the health care professionals who provide care to learn from and support one another. The women in pain who attend the conference will have opportunities for networking for social support and advocacy activities. Pain management professionals, doctors, nurse, social workers and others will learn more about how gender matters and opportunities to promote better professional care for those in pain.

The following are key findings from the 1998 report and still hold true for women in pain today.

  • Women experience more pain than men.
  • Women discuss pain more than men.
  • Women cope better with pain than men.
        
  • Society's attitudes towards men and women in pain may influence treatment.
        
  • The open expression of pain sometimes helps people obtain better pain control. Being seen as "too emotional" may work against a person, however, and lead to inadequate care.
        
  • Pain treatment that works for one gender may not work as well or at all for the other.
  • Physicians, nurses and all healthcare professionals need to consider gender when they diagnose illness and prescribe treatment.    
  • Researchers studying pain at every level, from the molecular and genetic to the clinical, need to assess the possible impact of gender. Exclusive use of males, whether animal or human, as the single group for research studies, is outmoded.

These issues are particularly important as the population grows older: women, on average, live 6 years longer than men. In a recent report on managing chronic pain in older persons, the American Geriatrics Society estimated that 25% to 50% of older persons living in the community have pain problems. About 1 in 5 older persons report taking pain-relieving medications several times a week.

When using high dosages of potent medications, including morphine and other narcotics to relieve pain, physicians worry about the possibility of addiction. Such concerns, it turns out, usually are groundless. Persons who need pain relief seldom use their medications inappropriately.

For more information on the National Institutes of Health Gender and Pain conference see http://painconsortium.nih.gov/genderandpain/Default.htm.

 

 
Target Audience

 

Women who experience persistent pain, their caregivers and healthcare providers.

Women In Pain Conference: Gender Matters

Agenda

 

 

Friday, September 18, 2009

 

Program:

 

8:15 – 9:00   Registration

 

9:00 – 9:10   Welcome from Denise Dedor (Health Anchor, KABC)

 

9:10 – 9:20   Welcome from For Grace and HAAF

                        John Garrett, Director, For Grace

                        Loretta Jones, Executive Director, HAAF

 

9:20 – 9:45   Opening Remarks/The Women in Pain Movement

                        Cynthia Toussaint, Founder & Spokesperson, For Grace

 

9:45 – 10:15 First Keynote: The Disparity toward Women in Pain

            Diane Hoffmann, JD, MS, Associate Dean for Academic Programs

                        Director, Law and Health Care Program, Professor of Law, University of Maryland

 

10:15 – 10:30  Morning Break

 

10:30 –11:00                                                                                        Second Keynote: Alternative-Complimentary Treatments for Women In Pain 

                        Patricia Wynn-Jones, MD

                        Chief, Pain Management, Olympic Hospital Los Angeles     

 

11:00- 11:30    Women and Pain: A Dramatization

                         Jean Davis, Ph.D.

                         Actors: David Zimmerman, TBA

 

11:30 – 1:00 Lunch/Networking

 

1:00   2:00  Breakout Sessions

 

2:00 –  2:30    “A Bitter Pill”: Barriers to Care Caused by Prescription Practices

                        Cheryl England, Editor-in-Chief, Southern California Physician magazine 

 

2:30 2:45   Afternoon Break

 

2:45 3:30   “Caregivers and Pain”

                         John Garrett. Director, For Grace

                         Felica Jones, Programs Coordinator, HAAF

 

3:30 3:50    Keys to Advocacy

 Loretta Jones, Executive Director, HAAF

 

3:50 4:00    Closing Remarks & Thank You’s

                         Loretta Jones & Cynthia Toussaint

 

Breakout Sessions:

 

A         Pain & Depression

Dr. Kenneth Wells,

UCLA, Neuropsychiatric Hospital

 

B         Pharmacological & Traditional Approaches to Pain Management (CME accredited)

Dr. Steven Richeimer, Director, USC Pain Management Center

 

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