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Support Care Cancer · Sep 2003
Multicenter StudyPain and its treatment in hospitalized patients with metastatic cancer.
- Stefano Cascinu, Paolo Giordani, Romina Agostinelli, Giampietro Gasparini, Sandro Barni, Giordano D Beretta, Franca Pulita, Laura Iacorossi, Domenico Gattuso, Marzia Mare, Stefania Munaò, Roberto Labianca, Renata Todeschini, Roberta Camisa, Riccardo Cellerino, and Giuseppina Catalano.
- Medical Oncology, University Hospital of Parma, Parma, Italy. cascinu@yahoo.com
- Support Care Cancer. 2003 Sep 1; 11 (9): 587-92.
GoalsThe aim of this prospective study was to assess the quality of pain management hospitalized cancer patients.Patients And MethodsIn a quantitative and qualitative evaluation from six oncology centers in Italy, all consecutive cancer patients complaining of pain and hospitalized during the same 2 weeks were requested to fill in a McGill pain questionnaire (MPQ), a present pain intensity scale (PPI), and a hospital anxiety and depression acale (HADS), and to answer a questionnaire focused (QF) on the quality of medical and nursing care. The healthcare provider's antalgic prescriptions were assessed by an index of pain management (IPM).Main ResultsOf 120 patients with pain admitted to oncology divisions (65 men and 52 women; mean age 57 years, range 21-79 years), 117 completed the questionnaires. The quantitative evaluation (PPI) showed a significant pain reduction between admission and discharge pain levels-from 2.65 to 1.50 ( p<0.001). While a significant reduction of anxiety (HADS) was also found-from 10.24 to 9.11 ( p<0.001)-depression did not improve (9.83 and 9.72). The most relevant information from qualitative evaluation (QF) was: in 37.6% of patients, pain level was higher overnight; 47% waited for spontaneous decrease of pain intensity before asking for nurse or physician intervention; 69% asked for nurse help when pain level was really high. The health care response to patients' pain was not completely satisfactory, since analgesic prescription was adequate in 56.52% but inadequate in 43.47%.ConclusionsPain control in hospitalized cancer patients is not completely satisfactory. The physician's attitude is to underestimate and undertreat pain, while nurses are not adequately trained for timely intervention despite published guidelines for pain management. The findings of this study support the concern of inadequate knowledge and inappropriate attitudes regarding pain management, even in cancer patients hospitalized in medical oncology divisions.
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