If pain can be defined as a highly unpleasant, individualized experience of one of the body's defense mechanisms indicating an injury or problem, pain management encompasses all interventions used to understand and ease pain, and, if possible, to alleviate the cause of the pain.
Pain serves to alert us to potential or actual damage to the body. The definition for damage is quite broad; pain can arise from injury as well as disease. After the message is received and interpreted, further pain can be counter-productive. Pain can have a negative impact on a person's quality of life and impede recovery from illness or injury, thus contributing to escalating health care costs. Unrelieved pain can become a syndrome in its own right and cause a downward spiral in a person's health and out-look. Managing pain properly facilitates recovery, prevents additional health complications, and improves an individual's quality of life.
Yet the experiencing of pain is a completely unique occurrence for each person, a complex combination of several factors other than the pain itself. It is influenced by:
As noted, the perception of pain is an individual experience. Health care providers play an important role in understanding their patients' pain. All too often, both physicians and nurses have been found to incorrectly assess the severity of pain. A study reported in the Journal of Advanced Nursing evaluated nurses' perceptions of a select group of American-born and Mexican-American women patients' pain following gallbladder surgery. Objective assessments of each patient's pain showed little difference between the severity for each group. Yet nurses involved in the study consistently rated all patients' pain as less than the patients reported, and with equal consistency, believed that better-educated women born in the United States were suffering more than less educated, Mexican-American women. Nurses from a Northern European background were more apt to minimize the severity of pain than nurses from Eastern and Southern Europe or Africa. Health care staff, and especially nursing staff, need to be aware of how their own background and experience contributes to how they perceive a person's pain.
|
|
Author Info: Joan M. Schonbeck, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Nursing and Allied Health, 2002 |