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Texas Education Code 51.309 – Pain Treatment Medical Education Course Work

(a) Each medical school shall determine the extent to which pain treatment medical education course work is meeting the instructional elements described in Subsection (b) and is offered to all students enrolled in medical schools.
(b) Pain treatment medical education course work should include instruction in:
(1) pain assessment in adults, children, and special populations, including elderly and impaired individuals;
(2) pain anatomy, physiology and pathophysiology, and pharmacology of opioid and nonopioid analgesic drugs, including pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics;
(3) the advantages and disadvantages of various methods of drug administration, side effects, treatment outcome, and the outcome of behavioral and other psychological therapy for pain;
(4) the psychological, social, economic, and emotional impact of malignant and nonmalignant acute and chronic pain on patients;
(5) indications for and outcomes of anesthetic and neurosurgical pain-relieving techniques, including nerve blocks and neuroaugmentative and neuroablative techniques; and
(6) the outcome of treatment of pain emanating from a damaged nervous system and neuropathic pain.

Terms Used In Texas Education Code 51.309

Texas Education Code 51.309 – Pain Treatment Medical Education Course Work

(a) Each medical school shall determine the extent to which pain treatment medical education course work is meeting the instructional elements described in Subsection (b) and is offered to all students enrolled in medical schools.
(b) Pain treatment medical education course work should include instruction in:
(1) pain assessment in adults, children, and special populations, including elderly and impaired individuals;
(2) pain anatomy, physiology and pathophysiology, and pharmacology of opioid and nonopioid analgesic drugs, including pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics;
(3) the advantages and disadvantages of various methods of drug administration, side effects, treatment outcome, and the outcome of behavioral and other psychological therapy for pain;
(4) the psychological, social, economic, and emotional impact of malignant and nonmalignant acute and chronic pain on patients;
(5) indications for and outcomes of anesthetic and neurosurgical pain-relieving techniques, including nerve blocks and neuroaugmentative and neuroablative techniques; and
(6) the outcome of treatment of pain emanating from a damaged nervous system and neuropathic pain.

Terms Used In Texas Education Code 51.309