Eaton Linda H, Langford Dale J, Meins Alexa R, Rue Tessa, Tauben David J, Doorenbos Ardith Z
School of Nursing, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Pain Manag Nurs. 2018 Feb;19(1):8-13. doi: 10.1016/j.pmn.2017.09.004. Epub 2017 Nov 15.
Individuals with chronic pain who live in rural communities often lack access to pain specialists and rely on primary care providers who may be less prepared. Research has indicated that rural residents with chronic pain are more likely to receive an opioid prescription than nonrural residents. Although self-management approaches are available for chronic pain management, it is unclear to what extent rural residents use these interventions. This study compares usage of self-management interventions and opioid-based analgesics for chronic pain management between rural and nonrural residents. This study is a secondary analysis of baseline data from a randomized controlled trial evaluating a telehealth intervention for chronic pain management. Participants, recruited from primary care clinics, were 65 rural residents and 144 nonrural residents with similar demographic characteristics. Differences in the use of self-management interventions, pain intensity, and opioid dose were evaluated between rural and nonrural residents. Rural residents (n = 50, 77%) were less likely to use self-management interventions compared with nonrural residents (n = 133, 92%) (p = .019). Opioids were taken for pain relief by 76% of the rural residents compared with 52% of the nonrural residents. A disparity exists in the use of self-management interventions for chronic pain management by rural residents compared with nonrural residents. Further study is needed to determine if this is related to the lack of access to specialists and/or pain management training of primary care providers. Nurses can play an essential role in addressing this disparity by educating patients about self-management interventions.
生活在农村社区的慢性疼痛患者往往难以获得疼痛专科医生的服务,只能依赖可能准备不足的初级保健提供者。研究表明,与非农村居民相比,患有慢性疼痛的农村居民更有可能获得阿片类药物处方。虽然有自我管理方法可用于慢性疼痛管理,但农村居民在多大程度上使用这些干预措施尚不清楚。本研究比较了农村和非农村居民在慢性疼痛管理中自我管理干预措施和阿片类镇痛药的使用情况。本研究是对一项随机对照试验基线数据的二次分析,该试验评估了一种用于慢性疼痛管理的远程医疗干预措施。从初级保健诊所招募的参与者包括65名农村居民和144名具有相似人口统计学特征的非农村居民。评估了农村和非农村居民在自我管理干预措施使用、疼痛强度和阿片类药物剂量方面的差异。与非农村居民(n = 133,92%)相比,农村居民(n = 50,77%)使用自我管理干预措施的可能性较小(p = 0.019)。76%的农村居民服用阿片类药物缓解疼痛,而非农村居民这一比例为52%。与非农村居民相比,农村居民在慢性疼痛管理中使用自我管理干预措施存在差异。需要进一步研究以确定这是否与缺乏专科医生服务和/或初级保健提供者的疼痛管理培训有关。护士可以通过对患者进行自我管理干预措施的教育,在解决这一差异方面发挥重要作用。