1 / 2

Objectives

Télécharger la présentation

Objectives

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A National Assessment of Acute and Chronic Pain and Pain’s Effect on Quality of Life in the von Willebrand PatientMichelle Witkop, DNP, FNP, BC,1 Angela Lambing, MSN, NP-C,2 George Divine, PhD2, Ellen Kachalsky, L-MSWC2, Dave Rushlow, L-MSWC,1 Jane Dinnen, RN, 1 1 Northern Regional Bleeding Disorders Center, Traverse City, MI; 2Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI; Quality of Life Scores by von Willebrand Type Quality of Life Scores (QOL) Objectives Results • Determine the language used by persons with von Willebrand Disease (vWD) in describing and distinguishing their experiences of acute and chronic pain. • Describe the strategies utilized to control pain. • Determine the perceived effectiveness of current pain management therapies on quality of life using a standardized Quality of Life tool • Determine who currently provides pain management to this population. • Evaluate demographics of the population studied. Pain Descriptors Methods • 1,104 overall questionnaires received • 217 von Willebrand’s disease • 764 hemophilia A or B • Convenience sample • 75% of vWD subjects were female (N=162) • Average age of vWD subjects was 46 years (range18-83) • 57% were married Discussion • Descriptive prospective study • IRB approval through Henry Ford Health System and not individual HTCs • Survey options included: • Web based questionnaire accessed by participants • Website: www.henryford/painstudy • Telephone interview scheduled by participants: • 1-800 phone number • Interview available to be scheduled 24/7 • Spanish services available upon request • Inclusion criteria • 18 years of age or older • Bleeding disorder • Hemophilia • von Willebrand’s disease • Understand, read and/or write English or Spanish • Marketing • NHF 2006 Kick Off- Philadelphia • NFH 2007 Florida- Booth Exhibit Hall • Flyers to home infusion companies • Consumer magazines advertisements and articles • Email blasts to hemophilia treatment centers • Most respondents were female,Caucasian, married, well educated, work full time and had Type I von Willebrand Disease. • With reported overall mean acute pain levels of 5.76/10 and chronic daily pain levels of 4.54/10, 45% of patients reported their pain was not well treated. • Although aching was the strongest word descriptor for chronic pain, respondents used similar word descriptors for acute/chronic pain; suggesting an inability to tell the difference • Patients see their primary care provider (47%) or their HTC/Hematologist (45%) for their pain management while 12% were seen by a Pain Clinic. • Acetaminophen was the most commonly used medication for acute and chronic pain in the majority of regions despite reported acute pain levels of 5.76/10. • NSAIDs continue to be used despite the bleeding risk in this population (30% acute/23% chronic). • Complementary and alternative methods (CAM) of pain management are not fully explored or utilized in this population. • A small percentage of patients are using illicit drugs and alcohol for pain relief nationally with varied results by regions. • Patients with Type I von Willebrand Disease have surprisingly low QOL scores, especially in the domains of fatigue/energy, physical problems, and emotional problems. Oral Pain Medications Used Limitations Non-Pharmacological Treatments Non-Pharmacological Treatments • Convenience sample • Not all regions adequately represented • Not accounted for languages other than English or Spanish • Computerized website access did not have drop down choices • Limit advancing questionnaire unless question answered Conclusions • Further studies are needed to: • Examine differences in pain management between regions; severity of disease • Quality of life issues , especially in Type I von Willebrand Disease. • Multimodal pain approach and the use of complementary and alternative therapies. • Better education is needed for all persons involved in the bleeding disorders community • The bleeding disorders community needs to work towards evidenced based pain management strategies for persons with bleeding disorders.

More Related