College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Immigr Minor Health. 2012 Dec;14(6):1045-51. doi: 10.1007/s10903-012-9582-x.
This study describes pain experience, analgesic use and barriers to pain control in African American cancer patients (N = 116). The overall adherence rate of analgesics was 46%. Constipation and nausea were the most commonly cited side effects of analgesics. Eighty-seven percent of patients reported concern about addiction to analgesics. Patients who believed their doctor needed to focus on curing illness rather than on controlling pain tended to comply with analgesic prescriptions (r = 0.20, p < 0.05). Patients with concerns that analgesics may cause confusion were less likely to take any type of analgesics (r = -0.16, p < 0.05). The study confirms that a patient's perceived barriers influence their decision to take analgesics, and also suggests that African American cancer patients may benefit from education that prevents misconceptions about analgesic use.
本研究描述了非裔美国癌症患者的疼痛体验、镇痛药物使用情况和疼痛控制障碍(N=116)。镇痛药的总体依从率为 46%。便秘和恶心是镇痛药最常被提及的副作用。87%的患者表示担心对镇痛药上瘾。那些认为医生需要专注于治愈疾病而不是控制疼痛的患者往往更遵守镇痛药处方(r=0.20,p<0.05)。担心镇痛药可能导致意识混乱的患者不太可能服用任何类型的镇痛药(r=-0.16,p<0.05)。该研究证实,患者感知到的障碍会影响他们服用镇痛药的决定,这也表明非裔美国癌症患者可能受益于教育,以防止对镇痛药使用的误解。