Pain medicine : the official journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine
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Review
Alternative routes to oral opioid administration in palliative care: a review and clinical summary.
A major goal of palliative care is to provide comfort, and pain is one of the most common causes of treatable suffering in patients with advanced disease. Opioids are indispensable for pain management in palliative care and can usually be provided by the oral route, which is safe, effective, and of lowest cost in most cases. As patients near the end of life, however, the need for alternate routes of medication increases with up to 70% of patients requiring a nonoral route for opioid administration. In order to optimize patient care, it is imperative that clinicians understand existing available options of opioid administration and their respective advantages and disadvantages. ⋯ This review is not designed to be a critical appraisal of the quality of current evidence; rather, it is a summation of that evidence and of current clinical practices regarding alternate routes of opioid administration. In doing so, the overarching goal of this review is to support more informed clinical decision making.
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Review Meta Analysis
Pain is associated with recurrent falls in community-dwelling older adults: evidence from a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Pain and recurrent falls are highly problematic in community-dwelling older adults, yet the association remains elusive. ⋯ Older adults with pain are at particularly increased risk of recurrent falls. Clinicians working with recurrent fallers should routinely assess pain while pain specialists should inquire about older adults' falls history.