The Pain Antidote: The Proven
Program to Help You Stop Suffering from Chronic Pain, Avoid Addiction to
Painkillers—and Reclaim Your Life. By Mel Pohl, M.D., and Katherine
Ketcham. Da Capo. $16.99.
This book dangles a promise
that it cannot possibly deliver on for most people, and in that respect it is
immeasurably cruel. Whether it is crueler than the promise of relief from
chronic pain through long-term use of medication, especially opioids, is a
matter of opinion and an ongoing source of debate in the medical community. Dr.
Mel Pohl’s book (and it is really his: all first-person references are to him,
with Katherine Ketcham apparently having the primary role of style polisher) approaches
chronic pain – a condition affecting one-third of Americans – from the
perspective of a family practitioner who believes much of modern medicine is
misguided. Pohl runs the Las Vegas Recovery Center, a pain-and-addiction
treatment facility where he personally and apparently enthusiastically
supervises a program to wean people with chronic pain from medicines and
provide them with healthful-living alternatives through better diet, more
exercise, and other improved lifestyle choices.
Nothing in The Pain Antidote is really new. The
debate about potent opioids and similar medicines for use in long-term pain
management (as opposed to the handling of acute trauma) has been ongoing for
years, and has been the subject of many books and countless shorter articles (both
scholarly and nonprofessional), meetings, seminars and research projects. There
is general agreement that drugs developed for treatment of intense, acute pain
are inappropriate for long-term use, and that there are ways to remove patients
from them and substitute alternative approaches in some cases, if not all,
through intense, long-lasting counseling, careful ongoing management,
substantial social support, and a medical team committed to spending a great
deal of time with each patient.
This is exactly the medical
model that is unavailable to most people in the United States these days – and
has become even less available since the advent of the Affordable Care Act,
which has resulted in overworked physicians generally needing to spend even
fewer minutes with patients than in the past (when those minutes were very few
already). Programs like Dr. Pohl’s at the Las Vegas Recovery Center are few and
far between, and they are generally extremely time-consuming, extremely costly,
and available only in very limited geographical areas. Whatever successes Dr.
Pohl has attained must be seen, therefore, as ones that are not readily
replicable in the everyday lives of the vast majority of people with chronic
pain.
Thus, The Pain Antidote will be most useful for helping people with
chronic pain understand why their bodies are going through such ongoing misery;
and it may point people toward possible
dietary or lifestyle changes that they can attempt
to incorporate into their everyday living in
part, even if not in full – even if Dr. Pohl would insist on an
all-or-nothing, my-way-or-the-highway approach to changing pain management.
The book starts with five
unexceptionable observations: all pain
is real; emotions affect how pain is experienced; opioids may make pain worse
over time; functional improvement rather than pain elimination is an
appropriate goal for chronic-pain sufferers; and “expectations influence
outcome.” This last point is crucial to Dr. Pohl’s approach: you must believe
that his proposals will work for them to do so. (This is reasonable on one
level, as is known from studies of the placebo effect, which the book discusses
at one point. However, it is all too readily subject to abusive interpretation:
if you do not improve when using Dr. Pohl’s plan, the fault lies in your lack
of belief rather than in the plan itself.)
Dr. Pohl is fond of
providing information in grouped form. There are “Six Basic Points” about pain
and the brain; seven possible “secondary gains” that people with chronic pain
may receive, thereby reinforcing their pain; “12 Behaviors That Might Signify
an Addiction Problem”; “12 Ways of Thinking That Get Us into Trouble”; and so
forth. He likes to present ideas in simplistic chart form, even when the ideas
themselves are far from simple to implement – for example, there is a “Thought
Pattern Chart” in which an initial thought about being in too much pain to get
out of bed, or even move, is supposed to lead to the “reasonable response” of,
“The pain isn’t going to kill me and I know movement is good for me – so I’d
better get moving!” Eventually, Dr. Pohl gets to the heart of his belief, in a
chapter called “Reviving the Spirit: Finding Meaning and Purpose in Your Life.”
Here he presents “The Basic Spiritual Principles Underlying the Twelve Steps”
used in many anti-addiction programs. He urges chronic-pain sufferers to find
ways to feel and express gratitude, to move toward acceptance, to practice
forgiveness, and more. And if this sounds more like a spiritual manifesto than
a medical one, that is because it is – one of Dr. Pohl’s bigger
understatements, two-thirds of the way through The Pain Antidote, is, “You probably have gleaned by now that I am
not a fan of opioids for the long-term treatment of chronic pain.”
Where The Pain Antidote eventually takes readers is to recommendations
for specific changes in one’s diet and lifestyle – changes that have been put forward many
times in many other contexts: eat less red meat and more fish; work out 15 to
30 minutes a day; try massage and/or yoga; etc. There are also some
recommendations that will be less familiar: locate specific
acupuncture/acupressure points and massage or press them yourself to “influence
the energy flowing through your body, thereby reducing inflammation and pain”
(which is in fact the Chinese theory underlying acupuncture, but not a belief
system supported by scientific research); and learn and use specific breathing
techniques such as prana breath and breathing Om. To reinforce his message
about the importance of proper nutrition for pain management, Dr. Pohl provides
an appendix of “Delicious and Nutritious Pain-Reducing Recipes” such as “slow
cooker ginger tea,” “curried butternut squash soup,” and “gluten-free peanut
butter cookies.”
There is absolutely nothing
wrong with trying the approach recommended in The Pain Antidote, and it may be quite effective when used in a
highly supportive institutional setting providing patients with long-term,
extended interactions with medical professionals. This is just what the Las
Vegas Recovery Center appears to offer. The underlying difficulty with this
book for the majority of pain sufferers, though, lies in the sad reality that
what works when carefully monitored and strongly supported by a professional
staff is much, much less likely to work in people’s individual, highly
stressed, time-pressed, frequently isolated, pain-filled lives. This
fundamental disconnect between what Dr. Pohl urges readers to do and the
circumstances under which his patients actually do these things risks making
chronic-pain sufferers, already burdened by unceasing hurt, feel even worse
because they simply cannot do all the things that The Pain Antidote suggests, rather too glibly, that they ought to
be doing.
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