Governor Charlie Baker Enlists
State’s Medical Schools In Combatting Opioid Epidemic
First-in-the-nation effort aims to educate all medical students on pain management and safe opioid prescribing methods
First-in-the-nation effort aims to educate all medical students on pain management and safe opioid prescribing methods
BOSTON – In an effort
to arm the next generation of doctors with the tools to curb the opioid
epidemic, Governor Charlie Baker met with the Massachusetts Medical Society and
the Deans from four medical schools today to discuss opportunities for
enhancing curriculum and establishing cross-institutional best practices in
pain management and safe prescribing of opioids.
“The avenue prescription pain pills can provide to addiction and
heroin use further stresses the need for advancing safe and responsible
prescribing methods in the medical community,” said Governor Charlie Baker.
“I am proud that the leaders of the major medical schools here today are
committed to working collaboratively with us and each other to review the
existing curricula for medical students around safe prescribing and proper use
in order to begin curbing this public health epidemic.”
Providing doctors additional training on opioids was part of the
comprehensive set of 65 recommendations released in June by the Governor’s
Opioid Working Group. The Massachusetts Medical Society (MMS) has been a strong
partner, leading the way in reviewing best practices for opioid
prescribing.
“Massachusetts is home to the best medical care in the
world. We are a national leader of cutting-edge diagnostics and
innovative technologies to treat complex conditions,” said MMS President Dennis M.
Dimitri, M.D. “With this collaboration by four major medical schools,
we are again setting a new standard—this time for giving our young medical
students and residents enhanced education to manage pain properly, while
identifying addictive behaviors and getting patients into treatment, when
needed.”
The four medical institutions – University of Massachusetts
Medical School; Harvard Medical School; Boston University School of Medicine;
and Tufts School of Medicine – instruct about 3,000 medical students per
year. With today’s first meeting, attendees agreed to continue towards
making recommendations regarding identified best practices, curricula
enhancements, and opportunities for public/private, cross-institutional
collaboration.
“Whether they aspire to be a primary care doctor, emergency
physician or a surgeon, participating in this type of training early on gets
them thinking about the importance of pain management for their patients as
well as the importance of choosing the right pain management tool,” said Commissioner Monica Bharel,
M.D., Department of Public Health.
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