1. Elderly Patients' Perception of Pain Management after Open and Reduction Internal Fixation Surgery.
- Author
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Whyte-Daley, Sharon M.
- Subjects
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PAIN management , *OLDER patients , *INTERNAL fixation in fractures , *PAIN perception , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Little is known about pain and pain management in older adults who experience open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) surgery. This qualitative descriptive phenomenological study explored two research questions: (a) What are the perceptions of pain and pain management in patients between 65 and 75 years of age, 48 hours after ORIF surgery in a community hospital? (b) What are the perceptions of adaptation after ORIF? A pilot study included four patients in two units of a Southern California hospital, followed by open ended, semi-structured interviews with 10 participants. Four themes emerged: (a) elderly patients experience different patterns of pain and coping mechanisms; (b) elderly patients experience pain after gaining consciousness from ORIF surgery; (c) effective pain management requires patients' empowerment and opportunity to participate in pain management decisions; (d) elderly patients perceive adaptation as a process of change and acceptance. Multimodal pain management strategies, including regional opioids and systemic antiinflammatories, could reduce post-operative, generalized bio-physiological stress experienced by elderly patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018