Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Patient trade-offs related to analgesic use for cancer pain : A MaxDiff analysis study

Rosa, William E.
Chittams, Jesse
Riegel, Barbara
Ulrich, Connie M.
Meghani, Salimah H.
Citations
Google Scholar:
Altmetric:
Abstract
Purpose Many patients with cancer pain deviate from prescribed analgesic regimens. Our aim was to elicit the trade-offs patients make based on their beliefs about analgesic use and rank utilities (importance scores) using maximum difference (MaxDiff) scaling. We also investigated if there were unique clusters of patients based on their analgesic beliefs. Methods This was a secondary analysis of a three-month, prospective observational study. Patients (N = 207) were self-identified African Americans and Whites, >18 years, diagnosed with multiple myeloma or solid tumor, and were prescribed at least one around-the-clock analgesic for cancer pain. MaxDiff analysis allowed us to identify patients utilities. Second, a cluster analysis assisted in ranking how analgesic beliefs differed by groups. Third, clusters were described by comparing key sociodemographic and clinical variables. Results Participants’ beliefs were a significant factor in choices related to analgesic use (chi-square = 498.145, p < .0001). The belief, ‘Pain meds keep you from knowing what is going on in your body’, had the highest patient endorsement. Two distinct clusters of patients based on analgesic beliefs were identified; ‘knowing body’ was ranked as top priority for both clusters. The belief that cancer patients become addicted to analgesics was moderately important for both clusters. Severity of side effects was the only key variable significantly different between clusters (p = .043). Conclusions Our findings support tailored pain management interventions that attend to individual beliefs about cancer pain and analgesic use. Future research should explore the relationship between analgesic utilities, actual analgesic taking behaviors, and how they impact patients’ cancer pain outcomes.
Keywords
Date
2020
Type
Journal article
Journal
Pain Management Nursing
Book
Volume
21
Issue
3
Page Range
245-254
Article Number
ACU Department
Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research
Faculty of Health Sciences
Relation URI
Source URL
Event URL
Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
File Access
Controlled
Notes