Pain is a frequent complaint of elderly people in hospitals and in the community, yet it is often not managed effectively. Barriers to effective management have included fear of narcotic addiction, inadequate assessment of pain, and attitudes of health professionals. Attempts have been made to improve the knowledge and attitudes of health-care professionals. This study examined the attitudes and knowledge of acute pain and pain management among well elderly people in rural and urban settings in the southeastern USA in order to identify possible barriers to effective pain management. Questionnaires on knowledge and attitudes towards pain and pain management were given to 62 rural and 63 urban well elderly people aged 65 years and older. Findings demonstrate a lack of knowledge as well as the presence of non-facilitative attitudes about pain and pain management.
1. The inadequate management of acute postoperative pain among adults is well documented. Studies have shown that 75% or more of hospitalized adult patients following surgery suffer moderate or intense pain even with the use of analgesics. Also, physicians under-prescribe narcotic analgesics and nurses administer less than the patient could receive. 2. Nurses' ineffective approaches to the management of pain have been attributed to inappropriate fears of addiction and respiratory depression, rigid attitudes regarding what constitutes adequate pain relief, and misunderstandings about the physiologic and psychologic components of pain. 3. The results of this study support McCaffery's (1989) finding that nurses do not understand the effective use of narcotics in relation to pain management.
The literature reports that 70% of cancer patients with advanced disease experience pain. Even with increased emphasis on research and education, problems with effective pain management are still evident. Hospice patients' knowledge and attitudes about pain may contribute to this complex problem. To gain an understanding of hospice patients' perspective on the management of pain, 57 hospice patients were asked to describe their knowledge of pain management and their attitudes toward controlling pain. Results showed non-facilitative attitudes and gaps in knowledge that may contribute to ineffective pain management among hospice patients.
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