Description
(description per course outline)
Speaker Bio
Dr. Martin Cheatle, Phd. is Director of Behavioral Medicine at the PENN Pain Medicine Center and Director of Pain and Chemical Dependency Research at the Center for Studies of Addiction, University of Pennsylvania. He is an Associate Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Cheatle specializes in the evaluation and treatment of chronic pain disorders from a biopsychosocial perspective and has been involved in extensive research including a NIH funded 5-year longitudinal study of the development of addiction in patients initiating prescription opioid therapy for chronic pain and as PI of a currently funded NIH/NIDA grant assessing phenotypic and genotypic markers of prescription opioid abuse. His main focus of research is pain management and addiction in vulnerable populations (HIV/AIDS, psychiatric patients) and pain and suicidal ideation and behavior.
Educational Goals
- Apply the complexities of the chronic pain condition to their individual practices.
- Classify the various presentations of the substance use disorder patient.
- Construct a treatment approach to patient with chronic pain that incorporates the principles learned.
- Realize the utility and the dangers of opioids in chronic pain treatment.
Learning Objectives
- Contrast the risk factors for suicide for the general population and patients with chronic pain.
- Explain the interpersonal theory of suicide.