Cancer nursing
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Review Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Coaching persons with lung cancer to report sensory pain. Literature review and pilot study findings.
Because clinicians often do not recognize that patients have pain and patients do not spontaneously communicate their pain, clinicians may fail to prescribe or administer adequate pain medications. One method of improving clinicians' assessments of pain is to coach patients to communicate their pain in ways that clinicians recognize. The aims of our pilot study were to (a) examine the feasibility of implementing a randomized clinical trial of a COACHING protocol in 18 outpatients with lung cancer pain and (b) estimate the effects of COACHING on nurses' knowledge of patients' pain location, intensity, quality, and pattern. ⋯ Improvement in percent agreement occurred consistently more often (pretest to posttest) between patient self-report of sensory pain and nurses' pain assessments in the COACHED group than in the NOT-COACHED group. Pilot study findings demonstrated feasibility of implementing the COACHING protocol and suggest that COACHING may be effective in reducing discrepancies between patients' self-reports and nurses' assessments of sensory pain. Design modifications are recommended for implementation of future studies.
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The reluctance of patients with cancer to report pain and to use analgesics hinders the management of their pain. In the United States, this reluctance is related to the patient's misconceptions regarding addiction and tolerance to analgesics and the desire to be a "good patient" who does not complain. Reports in the literature suggest that patients in Taiwan may have these same concerns and misconceptions. ⋯ The responses indicated that patients who were less educated were more likely to have concerns and that patients in general were most worried about tolerance. Patients who were inadequately medicated, as determined by an index of "adequate pain management" constructed for the study, had significantly higher levels of concerns. Open communication between health professionals and patients and educational programs about pain and about the concerns measured in this study could help overcome these concerns and misconceptions and improve pain management.