Pain management nursing : official journal of the American Society of Pain Management Nurses
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Review
New approaches for evaluating the quality of cancer pain management in the outpatient setting.
Both retrospective and prospective methods can be used to evaluate the quality of cancer pain management in the outpatient setting. Retrospective evaluations of the quality of cancer pain management in the outpatient setting provide benchmark data that can be used to change clinical practice for groups of patients or for specific types of cancer pain problems. Prospective evaluations of the quality of cancer pain management with patient diaries in the outpatient/home care setting can help clinicians do "real-time" evaluations and modify the pain management plan for individual patients. This report provides practical suggestions for evaluating the quality of cancer pain management in the outpatient setting.
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Review Comparative Study
Cyclo-oxygenase 2 inhibitors: an important new drug classification.
The pharmacologic treatment of acute and chronic pain has evolved greatly over the last several decades. Notably, several new classifications of drugs have emerged to meet the growing demand of patients in pain and health care providers who attempt to assist them. This article describes 1 new classification, cyclo-oxygenase 2 inhibitors, and provides specifics about the 2 agents currently available via prescription.
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The purposes of the study were to describe outcomes of pain management and predictors of patient satisfaction in a minority sample. By using a survey design, 3 instruments were used to collect data: (1) The American Pain Society's Patient Outcome Questionnaire-Modified, a 16-item self-report tool about pain and patient satisfaction; (2) a demographic form; and (3) the Pain Management Index. The sample consisted of 104 hospitalized Hispanic inpatients in a Rio Grande Valley hospital. ⋯ By using logistic regression, satisfaction with pain management was predicted by general pain in the last 24 hours (odds ratio = 4.02), pain-related interference with mood (odds ratio = 7.31), and age (odds ratio = 1.8). Clinical implications include the need to apply standardized guidelines, such as those from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, and to educate patients, particularly minority elders, about pain management approaches. The emergence of Hispanics as the fastest growing minority group increases the need for research regarding pain management outcomes to plan more effective intervention.