Smyrnioti Maria Eleni, Lyrakos Georgios, Meindani Maria, Matsota Paraskevi, Kostopanagiotou Georgia, Batistaki Chrysanthi
2nd Department of Anaesthesiology, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Pain Management Unit, Attikon Hospital, Athens, Greece.
Psychiatric Ward and Thalassaemia Transfusion Unit, General Hospital of Nikaia, Piraeus, Greece.
J Pain Res. 2021 Aug 21;14:2571-2581. doi: 10.2147/JPR.S323568. eCollection 2021.
On 10 March 2020, Greece entered an increasingly restrictive 42-day lockdown, in order to contain the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. All scheduled appointments and activities of the pain clinics around the country were postponed indefinitely. The aim of this prospective study was to assess the perceived impact of the first wave of the pandemic on pain, quality of life, and access to treatment, during the first austere lockdown in Greece.
In this cross-sectional study, 101 patients suffering from chronic pain completed a structured questionnaire. Levels of depression, anxiety, stress, personal wellbeing, optimism and personality traits were also evaluated, using the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS42), the Ten Item Personality Index (TIPI), the Life Orientation Test-Revised (GrLOT-R) and the Personal Wellbeing Index (PWI).
Despite the dramatic decrease in health care visitations before, during and after the imposed lockdown, most patients did not feel that access to pain physicians and medication was significantly affected. Higher levels of stress, anxiety, depression, neuroticism, openness to experience and general satisfaction with life seemed to be important determinant factors in how patients experienced their level, intensity and duration of pain, quality of life and response to medication.
The effects of the lockdown had a more severe impact on patients than the pandemic itself. For most, the level of their pain was not affected by the pandemic and was affected only slightly by the lockdown. Quality of life, however, was affected formost participants. Both the necessity and the complications of introducing the use of telemedicine to Greek chronic pain patients became evident during the study.
2020年3月10日,希腊进入日益严格的为期42天的封锁期,以遏制新冠疫情的第一波传播。全国疼痛诊所的所有预约诊疗和活动都被无限期推迟。这项前瞻性研究的目的是评估在希腊首次严格封锁期间,疫情第一波对疼痛、生活质量和治疗可及性的感知影响。
在这项横断面研究中,101名慢性疼痛患者完成了一份结构化问卷。还使用抑郁、焦虑和压力量表(DASS42)、十项人格指数(TIPI)、修订后的生活取向测试(GrLOT-R)和个人幸福指数(PWI)评估了抑郁、焦虑、压力、个人幸福感、乐观主义和人格特质水平。
尽管在强制封锁之前、期间和之后医疗就诊大幅减少,但大多数患者并不觉得看疼痛科医生和获取药物受到了显著影响。较高水平的压力、焦虑、抑郁、神经质、对经验的开放性以及对生活的总体满意度似乎是患者如何体验疼痛程度、强度和持续时间、生活质量以及对药物反应的重要决定因素。
封锁的影响对患者的冲击比对疫情本身更为严重。对大多数人来说,他们的疼痛程度并未受到疫情影响,仅略微受到封锁的影响。然而,大多数参与者的生活质量受到了影响。在研究期间,向希腊慢性疼痛患者引入远程医疗的必要性和复杂性都变得很明显。