Publications by authors named "Vanila Singh"

Article Synopsis
  • In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, overdose death rates involving various opioids and stimulants have been rising, highlighting a need to differentiate between the influence of illicit versus prescription opioids.
  • Many harm reduction strategies have been ineffective, largely due to oversimplified policies that excessively limit prescription opioids, neglecting their legitimate use for chronic pain management.
  • Interventional pain management has also faced increased restrictions, leading to a significant decline in procedures, compounded by issues related to the interpretation of CDC guidelines and increased access to illicit synthetic opioids.
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Background: The re-engineered definition of clinical guidelines in 2011 from the IOM (Institute of Medicine) states, "clinical practice guidelines are statements that include recommendations intended to optimize patient care that is informed by a systematic review of evidence and an assessment of the benefit and harms of alternative care options." The revised definition distinguishes between the term "clinical practice guideline" and other forms of clinical guidance derived from widely disparate development processes, such as consensus statements, expert advice, and appropriate use criteria.

Objective: To assess the literature and develop methodology for evidence synthesis and development of comprehensive evidence-based guidelines for interventional techniques in chronic spinal pain.

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The treatment of noncancer pain in the United States and globally is met with significant challenges, resulting in profound physical, emotional, and societal costs. Based on this need, numerous modalities have been proposed to manage chronic pain, including opioid and nonopioid interventions as well as surgical approaches. Thus, the future of pain management continues to be mired in evolving concepts and constant debates.

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Background: With increasing costs of health care in the United States, attention is focused on expensive conditions. Musculoskeletal disorders with low back and neck pain account for the third highest amount of various disease categories. Minimally invasive interventional techniques for managing spinal pain, including epidural injections, have been considered to be growing rapidly.

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