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Clinical Care & Specialties

Pain Management

The clinical discipline focused on assessing and relieving acute and chronic pain through medications, injections, nerve blocks, and interventional procedures. Many pain management interventions, such as epidural steroid injections and nerve ablations, are performed in ambulatory surgery centers as scheduled outpatient cases.

What is pain management?

Pain management is the clinical discipline focused on assessing and relieving both acute and chronic pain. It draws on a range of tools, including medications, injections, nerve blocks, and interventional procedures tailored to the source and severity of a patient's pain.

Practitioners in this field address pain that arises from injury, surgery, or long-standing conditions, often combining several approaches. The goal is to reduce suffering and restore function rather than simply to mask symptoms.

How is pain management used in an ASC?

Many pain management interventions are scheduled outpatient procedures well suited to ambulatory surgery centers. Treatments such as epidural steroid injections and nerve ablations can be performed efficiently and allow the patient to go home the same day.

Because these cases tend to be predictable in duration and resource use, they fit smoothly into a surgery center's scheduling and staffing model. As a recurring service line, pain management contributes steady procedural volume and reimbursement for centers that offer it.

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