| Literature DB >> 29178843 |
Fran Toye1, Kate Seers2, Stephanie Tierney2, Karen Louise Barker3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite recent guidelines suggesting that patients with chronic non-malignant pain might not benefit, there has been a significant rise in opioid prescription for chronic non-malignant pain. This topic is important because an increasing number of HCPs are prescribing opioids despite very limited evidence for long-term opioid therapy for chronic non-malignant pain outside of end-of-life care. To better understand the challenges of providing effective treatment, we conducted the first qualitative evidence synthesis to explore healthcare professionals' experience of treating people with chronic non-malignant pain. We report findings that explore healthcare professionals' experience of prescribing opioids to this group of patients.Entities:
Keywords: Analgesic, opioid; Chronic pain; Meta-ethnography; Qualitative evidence synthesis; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29178843 PMCID: PMC5702226 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-017-0663-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Example search terms – Medline: (a) qualitative subject headings); (b) qualitative free text terms; (c) pain subject headings; (d) pain free text terms
| (I) QUALITATIVE SUBJECT HEADINGS | exp QUALITATIVE RESEARCH |
| (II) QUALITATIVE FREE TEXT TERMS | Qualitative ADJ5 (theor* OR study OR studies OR research OR analysis) |
| (III) PAIN SUBJECT HEADINGS | exp BACK PAIN/OR exp. CHRONIC PAIN/OR exp. LOW BACK PAIN/OR exp. |
| (IV) PAIN FREE TEXT TERMS | (chronic* OR persistent* OR long-stand* OR longstand* OR unexplain* OR un-explain*) |
Fig. 1Flow Chart showing results of systematic search: this figure give the records identified, screened, retrieved, appraised and included in the review
Characteristics of 17 studies that included concepts exploring the experience of prescribing opioids to patients with chronic non-malignant pain
| AUTHOR YEAR | COUNTRY | PARTICIPANTS | DATA COLLECTION | ANALYSIS | AIM OF STUDY |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BALDACCHINO 2010 [ | SCOTLAND, UK | 29 physicians | 2 focus groups/19 interviews | Framework analysis | To describe physicians’ attitudes and experience of prescribing opioids for chronic non-cancer pain with a history of substance abuse. |
| BARRY 2010 [ | USA | 23 physicians | Semi-structured interview | Grounded theory | To identify barriers and facilitators to opioid treatment of chronic non-cancer pain patients |
| BERG 2009 [ | USA | 16 physicians and ‘assistants’ | Semi-structured interview | Thematic analysis | To explore providers’ perceptions of ambiguity, and then to examine their strategies for making diagnostic and treatment decisions to manage chronic pain among patients on methadone maintenance therapy. |
| BRIONES-VOZMEDIANO 2013 [ | SPAIN | 9 mixed HCPs: | Semi-structured interview | Discourse Analysis | To explore experiences of fibromyalgia management, namely diagnostic approach, therapeutic management and the health professional-patient relationship. |
| ESQUIBEL 2014 [ | USA | 21 family practitioners | In-depth interviews | Immersion-crystallization | To explore the experiences of adults receiving opioid therapy for relief of chronic non-cancer pain and that of their physicians |
| FONTANA 2008 [ | USA | 9 advanced practice nurses | Semi-structured interview | No specific method identified | To critically examine subjective factors that influence prescribing practices of registered nurses for patients with chronic non-malignant pain. |
| GOOBERMAN-HILL 2011 [ | UK | 27 general practitioners | Semi-structured interview | Thematic analysis | To explore GPs’ opinions about opioids and decision-making processes when prescribing ‘strong’ opioids for chronic joint pain. |
| KAASALAINEN 2007 [ | CANADA | 66 mixed HCPs: | Semi-structured interviews/focus groups | Grounded theory | To explore the decision-making process of pain management of physicians and nurses and how their attitudes affect decisions about prescribing and administering pain medications among older adults in long-term care. |
| KAASALAINEN 2010B [ | CANADA | 53 Mixed HCPs: | 6 focus groups/interviews | Case-study analysis | To: (1) explore barriers to pain management and those associated with implementing a pain management program in long-term care (LTC); (2) to develop an inter-professional approach to improve pain management in LTC. |
| KILARU 2014 [ | USA | 61 emergency physicians | Semi-structured interview | Grounded theory | To identify key themes regarding emergency physicians’ definition, awareness, use, and opinions of opioid prescribing guidelines. |
| KREBS 2014 [ | USA | 14 primary care physicians | Semi-structured interview | Immersion-crystallisation | To understand physicians’ and patients’ perspectives on recommended opioid management practices and to identify potential barriers to and facilitators of guideline-concordant opioid management in primary care. |
| MCCRORIE 2015 [ | UK | 15 general practitioners | 2 focus groups | Grounded theory | To understand the processes which bring about and perpetuate long-term prescribing of opioids for chronic, non-cancer pain. |
| RUIZ 2010 [ | USA | 19 mixed HCPs: | 3 focus groups 9 semi-structured interviews | Grounded theory | To explore the attitudes of primary care clinicians (PCPs) toward chronic non-malignant pain management in older people. |
| SEAMARK 2013 [ | UK | 22 general practitioners | Interviews/focus groups | Thematic analysis | To describe the factors influencing GPs’ prescribing of strong opioid drugs for chronic non cancer pain. |
| SIEDLECKI 2014 [ | USA | 48 nurses | Interviews | Grounded theory | To explore and understand nurses’ assessment and decision-making behaviours related to the care of patients with chronic pain in the acute care setting. |
| SPITZ 2011 [ | USA | 26 Mixed HCPs: | Focus groups | Thematic analysis | To describe primary care providers’ experiences and attitudes towards, as well as perceived barriers and facilitators to prescribing opioids as a treatment for chronic pain among older adults. |
| STARRELS 2014 [ | USA | 28 physicians | Open ended telephone interview | Grounded theory | To understand primary care providers’ experiences, beliefs and attitudes about using opioid treatment agreements for patients with chronic pain. |
Confidence in review findings – GRADE -CERQual assessment
| REVIEW FINDING | METHODOLOGICAL LIMITATIONS (NUMBER OF SATISFACTORY STUDIES) | RELEVANCE (PARTIAL OR DIRECT) | ADEQUACY (NUMBER OF CONCEPTS) | COHERENCE* (NUMBER OF STUDIES OUT OF 17) | OVERALL ASSESSMENT OF CONFIDENCE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SHOULD I, SHOULDN’T I? | ALL | 9 DIRECT | 19 | 9 [34–39, 43, 44, 48] | HIGH CONFIDENCE |
| PAIN IS PAIN | ALL | 5 DIRECT, | 8 | 6 [33, 39, 40, 42, 46, 48] | MODERATE CONFIDENCE |
| WALKING A FINE LINE | ALL | 9 DIRECT, | 16 | 8 | MODERATE CONFIDENCE |
| SOCIAL GUARDIANSHIP | ALL | 10 DIRECT, | 17 | 11 [33–35, 37–39, 41, 43, 45, 46, 48] | HIGH CONFIDENCE |
| MORAL BOUNDARY WORK | ALL | 12 DIRECT, | 27 | 14 [33–35, 37–39, 41, 43–49] | HIGH CONFIDENCE |
| REGULATIONS AND GUIDELINES | ALL | 8 DIRECT | 18 | 8 [34, 35, 38, 39, 41, 43, 48, 49] | MODERATE CONFIDENCE |
Fig. 2Conceptual framework: this figure illustrates the conceptual framework that demonstrates the complex decision ‘Should I shouldn’t I?’ prescribe opioids for chronic non-malignant pain. The decision is underpinned by the need to decipher ambiguity. ‘Social guardianship’ tips the balance against a decision to prescribe, whereas a sense that ‘pain is pain’ tips the balance towards prescribing. However the decision is not straightforward. The influence of the themes, ‘moral boundary work’, ‘walking a fine line’ and ‘regulations and guidelines’ are not clear-cut and add complexity to the decision