Riley-Doucet Cheryl
Oakland University, School of Nursing, MI 48309, USA.
J Fam Nurs. 2005 Aug;11(3):225-41. doi: 10.1177/1074840705279157.
Family dyadic beliefs about pain controllability were examined to determine what influence they had on patient symptom distress and subjective caregiver burden. The Calgary Family Assessment and Intervention Models and Illness Beliefs Model guided this investigation. Self-report questionnaires were administered to a sample of 81 family dyads that consisted of ambulatory cancer care older adult outpatients and their family caregivers. Inferential statistics indicated that family dyads were congruent in their beliefs about pain controllability. Descriptive statistics showed that family dyads with beliefs that the pain was controllable had less symptom distress and caregiver burden than dyads with beliefs that pain was not controllable. Results suggest that family dyadic beliefs that cancer-related pain is controllable have a positive influence on family pain control outcomes. Findings also support the need for nurses to include family members when developing pain management interventions for older adults.
研究了家庭二元组对疼痛可控性的信念,以确定它们对患者症状困扰和主观照料者负担有何影响。卡尔加里家庭评估与干预模型以及疾病信念模型指导了这项调查。对由门诊癌症护理老年成人患者及其家庭照料者组成的81个家庭二元组样本进行了自我报告问卷调查。推断性统计表明,家庭二元组在疼痛可控性信念上是一致的。描述性统计显示,认为疼痛可控的家庭二元组比认为疼痛不可控的二元组有更少的症状困扰和照料者负担。结果表明,家庭二元组认为癌症相关疼痛可控对家庭疼痛控制结果有积极影响。研究结果还支持护士在为老年人制定疼痛管理干预措施时纳入家庭成员的必要性。