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改善医患双方关于慢性疼痛的沟通:一种共享决策工具的开发和可行性测试。

Improving patient-provider communication about chronic pain: development and feasibility testing of a shared decision-making tool.

机构信息

University of New England and Shared Decision Making Resources, 1119 Five Islands Road, Georgetown, ME, 04548, USA.

Northern Light Mercy Hospital, Portland, ME, USA.

出版信息

BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2020 Oct 17;20(1):267. doi: 10.1186/s12911-020-01279-8.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Chronic pain has emerged as a disease in itself, affecting a growing number of people. Effective patient-provider communication is central to good pain management because pain can only be understood from the patient's perspective. We aimed to develop a user-centered tool to improve patient-provider communication about chronic pain and assess its feasibility in real-world settings in preparation for further evaluation and distribution.

METHODS

To identify and prioritize patient treatment goals for chronic pain, strategies to improve patient-provider communication about chronic pain, and facilitate implementation of the tool, we conducted nominal group technique meetings and card sorting with patients with chronic pain and experienced providers (n = 12). These findings informed the design of the PainAPP tool. Usability and beta-testing with patients (n = 38) and their providers refined the tool and assessed its feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary impact.

RESULTS

Formative work revealed that patients felt neither respected nor trusted by their providers and focused on transforming providers' negative attitudes towards them, whereas providers focused on gathering patient information. PainAPP incorporated areas prioritized by patients and providers: assessing patient treatment goals and preferences, functional abilities and pain, and providing patients tailored education and an overall summary that patients can share with providers. Beta-testing involved 38 patients and their providers. Half of PainAPP users shared their summaries with their providers. Patients rated PainAPP highly in all areas. All users would recommend it to others with chronic pain; nearly all trusted the information and said it helped them think about my treatment goals (94%), understand my chronic pain (82%), make the most of my next doctor's visit (82%), and not want to use opioids (73%). Beta-testing revealed challenges delivering the tool and summary report to patients and providers in a timely manner and obtaining provider feedback.

CONCLUSIONS

PainAPP appears feasible for use, but further adaptation and testing is needed to assess its impact on patients and providers.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

This study was approved by the University of New England Independent Review Board for the Protection of Human Subjects in Research (012616-019) and was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (protocol ID: NCT03425266) prior to enrollment. The trial was prospectively registered and was approved on February 7, 2018.

摘要

背景

慢性疼痛已成为一种独立的疾病,影响着越来越多的人。有效的医患沟通是良好疼痛管理的核心,因为疼痛只能从患者的角度来理解。我们旨在开发一种以患者为中心的工具,以改善慢性疼痛的医患沟通,并评估其在现实环境中的可行性,为进一步评估和推广做准备。

方法

为了确定和优先考虑慢性疼痛患者的治疗目标,改善医患之间关于慢性疼痛的沟通策略,并促进该工具的实施,我们对患有慢性疼痛的患者和经验丰富的提供者(n=12)进行了名义群体技术会议和卡片分类。这些发现为 PainAPP 工具的设计提供了信息。对 38 名患者及其提供者进行了可用性和测试,对工具进行了改进,并评估了其可行性、可接受性和初步影响。

结果

形成性工作表明,患者觉得他们既不受提供者的尊重,也不信任提供者,他们专注于改变提供者对他们的负面态度,而提供者则专注于收集患者的信息。PainAPP 纳入了患者和提供者优先考虑的领域:评估患者的治疗目标和偏好、功能能力和疼痛,并为患者提供量身定制的教育和患者可以与提供者分享的总体总结。有 38 名患者及其提供者参与了测试。一半的 PainAPP 用户与他们的提供者分享了他们的总结。患者对 PainAPP 的所有方面都给予了高度评价。所有用户都会向其他患有慢性疼痛的人推荐它;几乎所有人都信任信息,并表示它帮助他们思考我的治疗目标(94%)、理解我的慢性疼痛(82%)、充分利用下一次看医生的机会(82%)、不想使用阿片类药物(73%)。测试中发现,及时向患者和提供者提供工具和总结报告以及获得提供者反馈存在挑战。

结论

PainAPP 似乎具有使用可行性,但需要进一步调整和测试,以评估其对患者和提供者的影响。

试验注册

本研究经新英格兰大学独立保护人类受试者研究委员会(012616-019)批准,并在入组前在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上注册(协议 ID:NCT03425266)。该试验是前瞻性注册的,并于 2018 年 2 月 7 日获得批准。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/cd0f/7568350/e9964fedee0d/12911_2020_1279_Fig6_HTML.jpg

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