Articles: pain-clinics.
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A study published in 1992 highlighted wide variations in the provision of training in pain management. In this survey, data were collected from both pain clinicians and Programme Directors of the Schools of Anaesthesia to see if there had been any changes in training patterns since the introduction of the Calman training scheme. There did not seem to be a uniform improvement in the provision of training in pain management for Specialist Registrars and many may reach their Certificate of Completion of Specialist Training without a basic knowledge of chronic pain. It is thought that at the present time there will be few Specialist Registrars with sufficient training to take up consultant posts in pain management unless they compete for the much sought after, and often not fully funded, pain fellowships outside their rotations.
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Laboratory data, economic pressures, and the wish for humane treatment have been some of the driving forces behind improvements in paediatric pain management. Within the space of 10 years, there have been dramatic changes in the quality of treatment received by children undergoing surgical operations. Moreover, those receiving medical treatment, for example, sickle cell disease, have also benefited from increased experience in pain management. ⋯ Improved care, with close attention to pain relief, is not only humane, but improves the patient turnaround by enhancing rapid discharge. Further education is required to spread these benefits to children being managed outside highly specialised centres. Not only education, but investment, is needed also to ensure that all children receive a standard of care second to none.
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We previously determined that "intent" to return to work post pain facility treatment is the strongest predictor for actual return to work. The purposes of the present study were the following: to identify variables predicting "intent"; to predict membership in the "discrepant with intent" group [those chronic pain patients (CPPs) who do intend to return to work but do not]; and to predict membership in the "discrepant with nonintent" group (those CPPs who do not intend to return to work but do). ⋯ CPPs intentions of returning to their preinjury jobs are mainly determined by job availability and job characteristic variables but surprisingly not by pain variables. However, the results with "discrepant with intent" and "discrepant with nonintent" groups indicate that actual return to work is determined by an interaction between job availability variables and pain variables with pain variables predominating for long-term outcome.
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The objective of this survey was to investigate the current status of the epidural and intrathecal management in patients with chronic cancer and non-cancer pain in Germany and Austria. ⋯ Epidural and intrathecal pain therapy is frequently used in Germany and Austria, either as a complementary or alternative treatment to systemic pain therapy. Local anaesthetics followed by opioids are the most commonly used medicaments for this treatment. For some of the applied substances neurotoxicological data are lacking. The use of these substances has to be considered very carefully.
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In a cognitive perspective, chronic pain comprises at least three dimensions: First it is possible to study the relevance of pain related attitudes, beliefs and coping cognitions for the chronification of pain. Second psychological processes of learning and memory processes can be analysed. Third we can investigate uncontrolled cognitions in chronic pain patients. ⋯ The first part of the present paper deals with representations of pain events in autobiographical memory. In the second part a hindsight bias experiment is used as a prototype of altered information processing in the context of chronic pain. STUDY 1: In study one recollection of pain related events, pain experience and the sensory recalling of pain occurrences were sampled in 20 chronic pain patients, 17 psychiatric patients and 38 healthy controls. Pain patients showed a specific kind of pain related memory which had no parallel among psychiatric patients. Based on learning theory the significance of a pain related memory for chronification is discussed. STUDY 2: In the second study 18 pain patients, 13 psychiatric patients and 18 healthy controls were tested with a hindsight bias experiment. The hindsight-effect was observed in the usual extend in the student control group, but was significantly greater in the pain group and absent in the psychiatric sample. In addition to this global finding, multinomial modeling revealed group differences in specific model parameters. Basic units of information processing interact with the chronification of pain. This method of analysis thus proved as a promising tool for the assessment of cognitive aspects of clinical disorders.