• J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother · Oct 2024

    An in-Depth Exploration of Consumer and Consumer Representative Views on Chronic Pain Management in Australia: A Key Informant Interview Study.

    • Ingrid Bindicsova, Leanne M Hides, and Melissa A Day.
    • School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
    • J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother. 2024 Oct 1: 1101-10.

    AbstractChronic pain affects millions of Australians. Despite guidelines recommending non-pharmacological approaches as the first line treatment, opioid medications remain among the most common treatments. This study interviewed consumers and consumer representatives (i.e., representatives of peak pain advocacy organizations in Australia) to gain first-hand perspectives on chronic pain treatment in Australia. Individual semi-structured Key Informant Interviews (KIIs) with three consumers and three representatives were undertaken. Interviews were transcribed, and thematic analysis applied. Results showed that consumers and consumer representatives identified critical treatment access barriers. Another shared theme related to overarching principles of care, with sub-themes pertaining to the need for an interdisciplinary approach and pain education. A further shared theme focused on typical medical interventions, with one shared subtheme regarding the benefits and drawbacks of pain medications. Both groups highlighted the importance of a biopsychosocial approach with consideration of mental health, particularly related to perceived stigma and comorbidities. These findings highlight that chronic pain remains both undertreated and inadequately treated in Australia. There is a critical need to use novel approaches to overcome access barriers and stigma, and to advance precision medicine to match patients to the treatment most likely to be of benefit as early as possible in their journey.

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