Sickle cell disease patients with and without extremely high hospital use: pain, opioids, and coping
Autor: | William H. Sledge, Daniel F. Weisberg, Shan-Estelle Brown, Gabriela Balf-Soran |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Coping (psychology) media_common.quotation_subject Psychological intervention Pain Disease Anemia Sickle Cell Interviews as Topic Young Adult Health care Adaptation Psychological medicine Humans Pain Management Medical prescription Psychiatry General Nursing media_common business.industry Addiction Professional-Patient Relations Middle Aged Opioid-Related Disorders Hospitals Analgesics Opioid Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Pharmaceutical care Doctor–patient relationship Female Neurology (clinical) business |
Zdroj: | Journal of pain and symptom management. 49(3) |
ISSN: | 1873-6513 |
Popis: | Context Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) and extremely high hospital use (EHHU) encounter significant challenges in pain management because of opioid medication use for pain and providers' concerns about addiction. Objectives To characterize engagement with the health care system surrounding opioid pain management among SCD patients with EHHU by comparing their experiences with low–hospital-using (LHU) patients and their medical providers' perspectives. Methods One-on-one, semistructured qualitative interviews with patients and medical providers were audiotaped and transcribed. Participants were eight SCD patients with EHHU; matched by age, gender, and hemoglobinopathy type with eight SCD patients with low hospital use; and five providers identified by patients with EHHU as important to their care. A multidisciplinary team conducted chart review, created narrative summaries from the interviews, and used qualitative software to code transcripts based on themes. Results High–hospital-using patients and LHU patients had similar descriptions of their experience of pain and pain management with opioids. Patients and medical providers shared concerns about addiction. LHU patients described themselves as allies using specific interpersonal and symptom-related strategies, whereas high–hospital-using patients took a defensive and reactive stance toward their providers, who were similarly defensive about their care. Conclusion The prescription of opioid medications for SCD pain management exacerbates issues of distrust in the patient-provider relationship. Such issues dominate patient care in patients with EHHU. Patients with EHHU and providers may learn from the proactive nature of LHU patients' engagement with the health care system as further research and interventions are designed for EHHU. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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