College of Nursing, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Department of Emergency Medicine, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio.
Department of Psychology, University of Cincinnati College of Arts and Sciences, Cincinnati, Ohio; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; Center for Addiction Research, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Pain Manag Nurs. 2022 Aug;23(4):391-396. doi: 10.1016/j.pmn.2022.03.012. Epub 2022 May 1.
Legislation, practice recommendations, and the likely link between therapeutic opioid exposure and iatrogenic opioid use disorder (OUD) have led to reduced opioid prescribing. The effects of this change on unrelieved pain and the overdose crisis are not well-characterized.
We explored emergency department (ED) patients' beliefs and experiences involving pain and emergency care to inform the development of future psychosocial interventions that balance the need for acute pain management with risks from opioid exposure.
Qualitative, semi-structured interviews were conducted after discharge from an urban, academic Level 1 trauma center ED from September 2020 to May 2021 with 18 adult patients presenting with acute pain. After transcription of audio recording, common themes were identified using framework analysis. Thematic hierarchy was validated with Pearson correlation coefficients for cluster analysis of word similarity.
Of the 18 participants, most were Black (n = 11, 61%) and male (n = 12, 66.7%). Analysis identified one overarching theme: locus of control with an emergency pain encounter. Four themes were identified surrounding internal and external influences on pain management: (1) accessing healthcare for acute pain; (2) managing the pain after discharge; (3) seeking opioids: self-medicating and misuse; and (4) opioid crisis makes people in pain suffer.
Patients discharged from the ED reported unrelieved pain, factors that influence their pain management, and an ability to seek opioids from non-medical sources. There is a significant disconnect between patients and providers in terms of priorities in pain management and the importance of individualized care.
立法、实践建议以及治疗性阿片类药物暴露与医源性阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)之间的可能联系,导致阿片类药物的使用减少。这种变化对未缓解的疼痛和过量危机的影响尚未得到很好的描述。
我们探讨了急诊科(ED)患者在疼痛和紧急护理方面的信念和体验,以为未来的心理社会干预提供信息,这些干预措施需要平衡急性疼痛管理的需求与阿片类药物暴露的风险。
2020 年 9 月至 2021 年 5 月,在一家城市学术一级创伤中心 ED 出院后,对 18 名出现急性疼痛的成年患者进行了定性、半结构化访谈。在对音频记录进行转录后,使用框架分析确定常见主题。通过对单词相似性进行聚类分析的 Pearson 相关系数验证主题层次结构。
18 名参与者中,大多数为黑人(n=11,61%)和男性(n=12,66.7%)。分析确定了一个总体主题:急诊疼痛事件中的控制源。围绕影响疼痛管理的内部和外部因素确定了四个主题:(1)为急性疼痛寻求医疗保健;(2)出院后管理疼痛;(3)寻求阿片类药物:自我治疗和滥用;(4)阿片类药物危机使疼痛患者受苦。
从 ED 出院的患者报告有未缓解的疼痛、影响其疼痛管理的因素以及从非医疗来源获取阿片类药物的能力。在疼痛管理的优先事项和个性化护理的重要性方面,患者和提供者之间存在重大脱节。