NUNM & Oregon Health Forum Host Health Panel on Opioid Addiction
More than 28,000 Americans die from opioid abuse every year. In Oregon, reported to have the second highest
The breakfast forum takes place from 7–9 a.m. on Wednesday, August 24, 2106 at NUNM’s Radelet Hall, located at 2719 S.W. Kelly Avenue in Portland, OR. Breakfast will be served at 7 a.m. Free street and campus parking is available.
The forum will also be presented via livestream, a video platform that allows viewers to play the content on the web, iOS, Android, Roku and Apple TV devices. People who register for this live webinar will receive a user name and password 48 hours before the event.
The event, “Pain Management from Incidence to Intention,” is pending approval for 1.5 general CEUs from the Oregon Board of Naturopathic Medicine.
NUNM Health Centers Executive Director, Michael Sorensen said, “Natural medicine therapies have been proven to help manage pain and can address the critical need to find ways to reduce opioid dependence. We’re excited to participate in this important event with the Oregon Health Forum and our medical colleagues.”
The panel, moderated by NUNM Chief Medical Officer and Dean of Clinics, Dr. Regina Dehen, includes:
- Katrina Hedberg, MPH, Health Officer & State Epidemiologist, State of Oregon
- Paul Lewis, MPH, Portland Metro Health Officer
- John Muench, MPH, Director of Behavioral Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, OHSU
- Krista Nelson, MSW LCSW OSW-C, Providence Cancer Center
- Andrew Suchocki, Medical Director, Clackamas FQHC
- Kevin Wilson, Private Practice, Hillsboro, and Faculty at NUNM
Among the questions the panel of experts will discuss:
- What place should opioids play in chronic pain management?
- Considering the risk of tolerance and dependence, including the use of heroin, how are the treatments for opioid addiction and chronic pain related?
- What policy changes have we seen to date and what will we see in the near future?
- What assessments and evidence-based interventions need to be incorporated into the current healthcare delivery systems to improve patient outcomes with respect to chronic pain?
- When we talk about the opioid epidemic, patients are often thought to be at fault for their addiction. What does the biopsychosocial model of care have to say about this? Who is responsible for changing the prevailing attitude?
The Forum is co-sponsored by the Quest Center for Integrative Health and the Oregon Physical Therapy Association.
For more information or to register, visit NUNM Continuing Education.