Better Pain Treatment Needed for People with Severe Mental Illness

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

There is an urgent need to improve the way pain is diagnosed and treated in people with severe mental illness, according to a new review by UK researchers.

Depression and pain commonly co-exist, with pain prevalence in people with depression estimated at 65 percent. Pain is also experienced by 29% of people with bipolar disorder, about double that of healthy people.

But while the association between pain and mental illness is well-established, researchers say pain is not routinely assessed and managed in people with SMI, due in part to discrimination by healthcare providers. Mental health problems carry a fair amount of stigma – just like pain itself -- which impedes treatment.

“Healthcare professionals underestimate pain in the presence of perceived ‘psychosocial’ problems, making discounting of pain in people with SMI particularly likely. Indeed, there is evidence that they experience diagnostic overshadowing for physical healthcare,” lead author Whitney Scott, PhD, Kings College London, reported in PAIN, the official journal of the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP).

“In addition to limiting treatment access, pain-related invalidation, stigma, and discrimination exacerbate distress. Investigation is needed to understand the impact of intersecting experiences of stigma and discrimination in people with SMI and pain, and how to address these.”

Scott and her colleagues say there is limited knowledge about the effectiveness of pain treatments in people with SMI because they are often excluded from clinical trials due to their perceived “complex mental health needs.”

Even when pain is diagnosed, providers may be reluctant to prescribe analgesics to people with SMI because it may interact with mental health drugs they are already taking.

“Pharmacological management of pain in SMI is complicated by the potential for harmful side effects and interactions with psychotropic medications and the underlying mental health condition,” said Scott. “Antidepressants, including serotonin-noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors, are effective for pain management in the absence of depression and of course may improve co-morbid depression; however, unopposed anti-depressants may destabilise mood in bipolar disorder. Collaborative pharmacological and psychological care for comorbid pain and major depression is promising, but scarce.”

Little is also known about the effectiveness of non-pharmacological pain treatments, such as exercise and physical therapy, because people with SMI often experience isolation, fatigue and mood disorders, making them harder to motivate.  

To overcome these barriers, Scott and her co-authors say pain and mental healthcare need to be more fully integrated, with caregivers, mental health professionals, pain specialists and policymakers working together to enable more personalized care and understanding of the needs of people with SMI.