ALAMOSA — San Luis Valley Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Gregory McAuliffe explained that the chronic pain contract, which has been in place since about 2012 with some revisions afterwards, arose out of local health providers’ efforts to “get our arms a
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ALAMOSA — San Luis Valley Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Gregory McAuliffe explained that the chronic pain contract, which has been in place since about 2012 with some revisions afterwards, arose out of local health providers’ efforts to “get our arms around this issue we are having with opioid addiction.”
One way to deal with it was to have the same pain contract for all medical facilities, whether it was the Rio Grande Hospital, San Luis Valley Health, Valley-Wide Health Systems or Conejos County Hospital, McAuliffe explained.
“We will send the message we all want the same thing,” McAuliffe said. “The driving force behind this document is patient safety because we are dealing with drugs that are extremely dangerous. We see people overdosing and dying on these drugs. We want to do everything we can to have a partnership with our patients who are taking these medicines to provide the highest level of safety we possibly can.”
McAuliffe said there was no intention for the form to be offensive, and its authors are open to hearing how it could be improved.
“It really is around keeping our patients safe in their use of very dangerous medicines.”
Anyone who is on a controlled substance for more than 90 days is expected to sign this agreement, he explained.
“I think we have a good form. It has stood the test of time in our own community,” he said.
McAuliffe said there have been a few patients who have balked at the form “because it holds the patients accountable.”
By signing the form the patient agrees to numerous conditions such as not using illegal drugs, not sharing, selling or trading medication, not obtaining controlled medications from other providers, making sure medications are not lost or stolen because they will not be replaced, only refilling medications during office hours (not in the emergency room, evenings or by mail), agreeing to blood or urine tests and bringing medicines in for pill counts when asked.
McAuliffe said health care providers have asked patients to bring in their medicines if they suspected someone was sharing their pills.