Journal of pain and symptom management
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Palliative care does not end with the death of the patient, and many palliative care services offer specific follow-up services for the bereaved. The aims of this study were to quantitate perceived bereavement needs and to qualitatively describe these needs. The study design was cross-sectional and targeted family members three to nine months after the patient's death. ⋯ The family members wanted to talk about what had happened during the palliative phase (e.g., if the patient had suffered or not), and also about their present situation, their feelings of loneliness, and the future. The follow-up procedure made the family member experience a feeling of being recognized as a person with their own needs and was also valuable with regard to the family members' feelings of guilt. The findings are discussed in relation to narrative theory, meaning-based coping, and the dual process model of coping with bereavement, and designing follow-up procedures.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jan 2008
Should the rate of opioid dose escalation be included as a feature in a cancer pain classification system?
The purpose of this study was to assess the need for opioid dose escalation as a feature of a pain classification system for advanced cancer patients. Opioid dose escalation was included as a prognostic feature in the original Edmonton Staging System (ESS) for pain classification, but was not included among the five features of the revised ESS (rESS): pain mechanism, incident pain, psychological distress, addictive behavior, and cognitive function. Mercadante et al.'s definition of opioid escalation index percentage (OEI%) has been used as a surrogate marker for opioid responsiveness. ⋯ There were no significant associations between OEI% and age, neuropathic pain, incident pain, psychological distress, or addictive behavior. As originally proposed as a clinical marker, the OEI% may oversimplify the complexity of pain management in advanced cancer patients. Future studies are required to better elucidate the need for opioid dose escalation as a feature of a cancer pain classification system.
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Cancer pain management guidelines recommend nondrug interventions as adjuvants to analgesic medications. Although physicians typically are responsible for pharmacologic pain treatments, oncology staff nurses, who spend considerable time with patients, are largely responsible for identifying and implementing nondrug pain treatments. Oncology nurses' use of nondrug interventions, however, has not been well studied. ⋯ In addition, use of guided imagery was predicted by a composite score on beliefs about characteristics of patients who may benefit from the intervention (e.g., cognitive ability; P<0.05). Some nurse demographic, professional preparation, and practice environment characteristics also predicted use of individual nondrug interventions. Efforts to improve application of nondrug interventions should focus on innovative educational strategies, problem solving to secure support, and development and testing of new delivery methods that require less time from busy staff nurses.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jan 2008
Quality of life at the end of life for nursing home residents: perceptions of hospice and nursing home staff members.
This study examined whether the perceptions of nursing staff members about the importance of quality-of-life domains and their perceived ability to influence those domains for residents at the end of life were affected by their institutional affiliation, level of training, or residents' cognitive status. Respondents were 146 Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs) and Registered Nurses (RNs) from nursing homes and hospices. Magnitude estimation scales were used to rate the importance of and perceived ability to influence 11 quality-of-life domains for both cognitively intact and cognitively impaired residents. ⋯ Respondents affiliated with hospice agencies also reported lower average importance and ability to influence ratings on some domains, although the high ratings overall limit the clinical significance of these differences. Importance ratings were not affected by the level of education, but CNAs reported higher perceived ability to influence ratings on four domains than did RNs. Future studies should explore whether the domains measured adequately capture the end-of-life experience in nursing homes.