Adult Nurse Practitioner Stanford Health Care - Division Pain Medicine Division Pain Medicine, Stanford Health Care San Carlos, California
Pain during pregnancy generally involves musculoskeletal conditions, fibromyalgia, neuropathic pain or chronic headache including migraine.
For a woman with chronic pain, adequate use of analgesics may be necessary during pregnancy. It is important to understand the impact the use of analgesic drugs has on the developing fetus. For women with opioid-use disorder, many are often untreated or undertreated. This may stem from a fear and misunderstanding of which analgesics are safe.
Knowledge about which pharmaceuticals and non-pharmaceutical treatments are safe and effective in pregnancy, or in opioid-use disorder, is important for NPs in practices where the care of these women takes place.
This lecture will explore the effects of unmanaged pain on the pregnant female as well as fetus, it will also provide the audience with a sound, evidenced based approach to safely manage chronic pain in the pregnant female with and without an opioid-abuse disorder.
Learning Objectives:
Describe the challenges of treating pain in pregnancy.
Identify three effective treatment strategies for pain during pregnancy.
State two concerns regarding prescribing opioids during pregnancy.