Merminod Gilles, Weber Orest, Semlali Imane, Terrier Anamaria, Decosterd Isabelle, Rubli Truchard Eve, Singy Pascal
Department of Psychiatry, Liaison Psychiatry Service, Lausanne University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Language and Information Sciences Department, Faculty of Arts, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
BMC Geriatr. 2022 Apr 23;22(1):358. doi: 10.1186/s12877-022-03058-8.
The expression of chronic pain remains a delicate matter for those older persons who suffer from this condition. If many studies highlight the difficulties of putting pain into words, scarce are those that take into account how given social networks can facilitate or prevent its expression. Based on a qualitative study that explores the communication about chronic pain in older persons' social network, this article reports on this key issue of talking about health in later life within family settings and provides clinicians with information about the way older persons with chronic conditions perceive their everyday realities and social relations.
A multidisciplinary research team (medicine, linguistics and psychology) interviewed 49 persons with chronic pain, all from the French-speaking part of Switzerland, aged 75 and older, without any major cognitive or auditory impairments. After transcription, the interviews were analyzed by combining content and discourse analysis with social network theories.
Communication about chronic pain depends significantly on the position of the interlocutors within the family structure, with a preference for direct relatives or individuals with similar difficulties. In social networks, the ability to communicate about chronic pain is both a resource (by allowing older persons to get help or by strengthening interpersonal relations) and a challenge (by threatening their autonomy, social relations or self-esteem).
The study shows the predominance of the nuclear family (partner, children) in communication relating specifically to the everyday management of chronic pain. This state of affairs is, nevertheless, balanced by issues of (loss of) autonomy. These findings, in line with current trends in geriatrics, could benefit future reflections on the scope and limits of including relatives in the care of older patients with chronic conditions.
对于患有慢性疼痛的老年人来说,表达慢性疼痛仍然是一个微妙的问题。尽管许多研究强调了用语言表达疼痛的困难,但很少有研究考虑特定的社会网络如何促进或阻碍这种表达。基于一项探索老年人社交网络中慢性疼痛交流情况的定性研究,本文报告了在家庭环境中谈论晚年健康这一关键问题,并为临床医生提供有关患有慢性病的老年人如何看待其日常现实和社会关系的信息。
一个多学科研究团队(医学、语言学和心理学)采访了49名患有慢性疼痛的人,他们均来自瑞士法语区,年龄在75岁及以上,没有任何严重的认知或听力障碍。转录后,通过将内容和话语分析与社会网络理论相结合来分析访谈内容。
关于慢性疼痛的交流很大程度上取决于对话者在家庭结构中的位置,人们更倾向于与直系亲属或有类似困难的人交流。在社交网络中,谈论慢性疼痛的能力既是一种资源(通过让老年人获得帮助或加强人际关系),也是一种挑战(通过威胁他们的自主性、社会关系或自尊)。
该研究表明,在与慢性疼痛日常管理相关的交流中,核心家庭(伴侣、子女)占主导地位。然而,这种情况因自主性(丧失)问题而得到平衡。这些发现与老年医学的当前趋势一致,可能有助于未来对在照顾患有慢性病的老年患者时让亲属参与的范围和限制进行思考。