Pain management nursing : official journal of the American Society of Pain Management Nurses
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The purpose of this study was to determine the self-report pain rating scale(s) that can be used to quantify pain in elderly persons across cognitive functioning levels. Randomly selected elderly subjects (N = 100) completed the Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire to categorize their level of cognitive impairment: intact (n = 36), mild (n = 9), moderate (n = 15), and severe (n = 40). Pain was measured with the Memorial Pain Assessment Card verbal subscale, FACES, COOP pain subscale, a numeric rating scale, and the Present Pain Intensity subscale of the McGill Pain Questionnaire. ⋯ Of the severely impaired, 30% were able to complete 1 or more pain assessment tools. Intraclass correlations showed a high degree of consistency among all pairs of tools (intraclass correlation > 0.74). We conclude that most elderly, with normal to moderately impaired cognitive functioning, as well as some severely impaired elderly, are capable of using self-report tools to rate their pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
An educational implementation of a cancer pain algorithm for ambulatory care.
Algorithms are proposed as a means of operationalizing guidelines or standards for cancer pain management. Professional education is used as the means to translate knowledge into practice. Outcomes measurement is the gold standard for validating improvement. ⋯ There was a clear deterioration in the impact of the training over time. The most significant effect occurred within the first 140 days after the intervention and was followed by a gradual return to baseline practice. In conclusion, algorithmic interventions can be successfully transferred into community practice, but further work must be performed to develop methods for securing retention of knowledge and maintaining improved outcomes.
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Migraine is a significant pain problem for almost one third of women in the United States. Little previous research has been conducted regarding the effects of migraine headache on the lives of women migraineurs. The purpose of this report is to determine the contribution of coping, depressive symptomatology, and the chronic pain experience on disability and quality of life in women with migraine. ⋯ In the second regression analysis, 64.8% of the variance in quality of life was accounted for by depressive symptomatology, migraine headache pain, and the chronic pain experience. The variance in both outcome variables, disability and quality of life, was accounted for by similar predictor variables: depressive symptomatology, the chronic pain experience, and migraine headache pain. Further study is needed to determine specific personal and illness-related factors, pain characteristics, and coping strategies used that may predict outcomes of migraine headache such as disability, quality of life, helplessness, and other as yet unidentified effects of migraine headache.
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Methods to treat cancer pain effectively have existed for more than 2 decades. However, the effective treatment of cancer pain continues to elude many patients with cancer who suffer from poor management. Although efforts to address the problem of cancer pain in the United States have acknowledged the importance of patient education and advocacy, few endeavors, to date, have attended to the special needs of inner-city, low-literacy, or socioeconomically disadvantaged patients from minority cultural groups. ⋯ The focus group approach was used to develop materials that would empower patients and families to more effectively participate in pain management when working with health care providers from cultures other than their own. Qualitative data analysis methods were used to analyze transcripts of taped focus group sessions. Themes emerged from the data regarding pain and its culturally competent management as well as the group process of booklet development.