1Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
2Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
J Altern Complement Med. 2019 Jul;25(7):719-726. doi: 10.1089/acm.2019.0074.
To use a psychosocial framework to examine the pain experiences of low-income, ethnically diverse patients before and after an Integrative Pain Management Program (IPMP). IPMP is a 12-week, multimodal pain group incorporating mindfulness, acupuncture, massage, education, movement, and health coaching. The authors conducted semistructured interviews at the beginning, end, and 3 months following completion of IPMP. Interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed and analyzed using inductive coding methods. A primary care clinic in San Francisco, CA, serving low-income, ethnically diverse patients, many of whom are marginally housed and living with disabilities. Forty-one patients with a diagnosis of chronic pain, currently receiving prescription opioids and referred by their primary care provider, who participated in IPMP. Authors thematically analyzed 104 individual interviews with 41 IPMP participants, including 41 baseline, 35 three-month follow-up, and 28 six-month follow-up. Before IPMP, participants described a psychologic "vicious cycle" of pain symptoms that worsened with movement and anxiety, while increasing their sense of disempowerment and social isolation. Following IPMP, patients reported using new strategies to manage pain, including lowering medication use, resulting in an emerging sense of psychologic resilience, and more social connections. IPMP offers an accessible model for addressing psychosocial aspects of chronic pain. Vulnerable patients engaged with integrative medicine groups and developed new perspectives and tools for managing their pain; they emerged feeling hopeful and resilient. These results support the use of integrative medicine groups for targeting psychosocial aspects of chronic pain within primary care.
使用心理社会框架来检查低收入、种族多样化患者在接受综合疼痛管理计划(IPMP)前后的疼痛经历。IPMP 是一个为期 12 周的多模式疼痛小组,包括正念、针灸、按摩、教育、运动和健康指导。作者在 IPMP 开始、结束和完成后 3 个月进行了半结构化访谈。访谈进行了数字记录和转录,并使用归纳编码方法进行了分析。位于加利福尼亚州旧金山的一家初级保健诊所,为低收入、种族多样化的患者提供服务,其中许多人住房条件差,患有残疾。41 名被诊断为慢性疼痛的患者,目前正在服用处方阿片类药物,并由他们的初级保健提供者转介,他们参加了 IPMP。作者对 41 名 IPMP 参与者的 104 次个人访谈进行了主题分析,包括 41 次基线、35 次三个月随访和 28 次六个月随访。在 IPMP 之前,参与者描述了疼痛症状的心理“恶性循环”,随着运动和焦虑的增加,疼痛症状恶化,同时增加了他们的无力感和社会孤立感。在 IPMP 之后,患者报告使用新的策略来管理疼痛,包括降低药物使用量,从而产生新的心理弹性感,并建立更多的社会联系。IPMP 提供了一种可访问的模式,用于解决慢性疼痛的心理社会方面。弱势患者参与综合医学小组,并发展出管理疼痛的新观点和工具;他们感到充满希望和有韧性。这些结果支持在初级保健中使用综合医学小组来针对慢性疼痛的心理社会方面。