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人们宁愿继续忍受疼痛,也不愿提前进行手术。

People Prefer to Continue with Painful Activities Even if They Lead to Earlier Surgery.

机构信息

Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin, Texas, USA.

出版信息

Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021 Sep 1;479(9):1927-1935. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001730.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The degree to which physical activity results in arthritis progression is unknown, but it probably is less than most people believe. But the belief that painful activity is harmful has notable associations both with greater pain intensity and greater activity intolerance among people seeking care for painful conditions such as osteoarthritis. If there were evidence that people not seeking care would prefer to accommodate a painful cherished activity, even if such accommodation is harmful, this might remind surgeons that many people seeking their care also hold this value. Care strategies could be designed to help people reconnect with this value by guiding them to an appropriate weighting of the potential benefits and the potential harms of painful activity.

QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) What degree of harm (measured as a decrease in the number of years before reconstructive surgery) are people willing to trade to continue a cherished activity? (2) What factors are associated with the chosen number of years? (3) What percentage of patients is willing to trade harm to the joint (presented as surgery 3 years earlier) to continue their cherished activity? (4) What factors are associated with the choice to trade harm for continued activity?

METHODS

We performed an online, survey-based, time trade-off experiment using a crowdsourcing website that allows users to pay volunteers to complete surveys. The survey was closed when the prespecified number of surveys was obtained. The experiment measured personal and psychological factors associated with the willingness to accommodate harmful painful activity to continue cherished activities among people not currently troubled by the condition, an approach favored in trade-off studies. Large crowdsourcing survey studies may not represent the general population, but they have sufficient diversity to determine factors associated with responses. Participants (539 total, 289 men and 250 women with a mean age of 33 ± 11 years) completed validated measures of symptoms of anxiety and depression, activity tolerance, an 11-point ordinal measure of pain intensity, and three validated questionnaires addressing common misconceptions about pain. To answer our first and second questions, we calculated the harm (measured as a decrease in the number of years before reconstructive surgery) that people were willing to trade to continue their cherished activity, and then we used multiple linear regression to identify factors associated with the number of years. To answer the third and fourth questions, we calculated the percentage of patients who would choose to trade harm to the joint (surgery 3 years earlier) to continue their cherished activity and then we used multiple logistic regression to identify factors associated with the choice to trade harm for activity.

RESULTS

Participants were willing to trade harm in the form of more rapid disease progression leading to surgery a mean of 4.5 ± 3.6 years earlier to continue a cherished activity. Controlling for personal and psychological factors, a greater number of years people were willing to trade was associated with slightly greater bodily pain intensity (r = 0.11; p = 0.01). Seventy-six percent (410 of 539) of participants were willing to trade harm in the form of needing surgery 3 years earlier to continue their cherished activity. Controlling for personal and psychological factors, a choice to trade earlier surgery for continued activity was associated with an income greater than USD 50,000 per year (odds ratio 2.07 [95% confidence interval 1.17 to 3.65]; p = 0.01) and greater fear of painful movement (OR 1.07 [95% CI 1.01 to 1.15]; p = 0.04).

CONCLUSION

People are relatively willing to accommodate pain to continue a cherished activity, even if it causes harm.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

Musculoskeletal specialists can incorporate strategies to help people seeking care to revitalize their inherent level of willingness to accommodate painful activity. One strategy might be to attend to an appropriate weighting of the potential benefits and the potential harms of painful activity.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

Level II, prognostic study.

摘要

背景

目前尚不清楚体力活动在多大程度上导致关节炎进展,但可能不如大多数人认为的那么大。但是,认为疼痛活动有害的观点与寻求骨关节炎等疼痛疾病治疗的人群的疼痛强度更大和活动耐受力更低之间存在显著关联。如果有证据表明未寻求治疗的人宁愿接受疼痛的钟爱活动,即使这种接受活动会造成伤害,这可能会提醒外科医生,许多寻求他们治疗的人也持有这种价值观。治疗策略可以通过指导人们适当权衡疼痛活动的潜在益处和潜在危害,帮助人们重新建立这种价值观。

问题/目的:(1)人们愿意用多少年的健康来换取继续进行心爱的活动?(2)哪些因素与所选年限有关?(3)有多少患者愿意用关节的损伤(表现为手术提前 3 年)来换取继续进行他们心爱的活动?(4)哪些因素与选择用伤害换取继续活动有关?

方法

我们通过一个允许用户付费让志愿者完成调查的众包网站进行了一项在线、基于调查的时间权衡实验。当达到规定的调查数量时,调查就会关闭。该实验通过衡量目前没有受到该疾病困扰的人群中,为了继续进行有价值的活动而愿意接受疼痛活动的个人和心理因素,来测量个人和心理因素与继续进行有价值的活动的意愿之间的权衡。大型众包调查研究可能无法代表一般人群,但它们具有足够的多样性,可以确定与反应相关的因素。参与者(共 539 人,其中 289 名男性和 250 名女性,平均年龄 33 ± 11 岁)完成了验证的焦虑和抑郁症状、活动耐量、11 点疼痛强度等级量表和三个验证的关于疼痛常见误解的问卷的测量。为了回答我们的第一个和第二个问题,我们计算了人们愿意用多少年的健康来换取继续进行他们心爱的活动,然后我们使用多元线性回归来确定与年限有关的因素。为了回答第三个和第四个问题,我们计算了愿意用关节损伤(手术提前 3 年)来换取继续进行他们心爱的活动的患者百分比,然后我们使用多元逻辑回归来确定与选择用伤害换取活动有关的因素。

结果

参与者愿意用更快的疾病进展导致手术的形式来换取 4.5 ± 3.6 年的健康,以继续进行他们心爱的活动。在控制个人和心理因素的情况下,人们愿意用更多的年数来换取,与身体疼痛强度略高(r = 0.11;p = 0.01)有关。76%(410/539)的参与者愿意用需要手术提前 3 年的形式来换取继续进行他们心爱的活动。在控制个人和心理因素的情况下,选择用更早的手术换取继续活动与收入超过每年 50,000 美元(优势比 2.07 [95%置信区间 1.17 至 3.65];p = 0.01)和更大的对疼痛运动的恐惧(OR 1.07 [95%CI 1.01 至 1.15];p = 0.04)有关。

结论

人们相对愿意接受疼痛来继续进行他们心爱的活动,即使这会造成伤害。

临床意义

肌肉骨骼专家可以采用策略来帮助寻求治疗的人恢复他们对接受疼痛活动的固有意愿。一种策略可能是关注疼痛活动的潜在益处和潜在危害的适当权衡。

证据等级

二级,预后研究。

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