9 results on '"Gauthier, Lynn"'
Search Results
2. Pain, aging and dementia: Towards a biopsychosocial model.
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Gagliese, Lucia, Gauthier, Lynn R., Narain, Nadine, and Freedman, Tamlyn
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PAIN & psychology , *COGNITIVE ability , *BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL model , *MENTAL depression , *EXECUTIVE function - Abstract
Dementia is a progressive disease associated with irreversible impairment and loss of cognitive abilities. About half of older people with dementia experience pain. In this paper, we propose that pain in older people with dementia can be conceptualized as the final result of the interaction of three heterogeneous phenomena, pain, aging, and dementia, which are created and influenced by the interactions of predisposing, lifelong, and current biopsychosocial factors. We review pain assessment in people with dementia using both self-report and observational/behavioral measures. We then review the biological/sensory, psychological (cognitive and affective) and social dimensions of pain in dementia. The available data suggest that dementia does not impact pain threshold or tolerance. To date, there is little research on the social dimension of pain in dementia. Changes in the affective domain in response to experimental pain have been contradictory with evidence supporting both increased and decreased unpleasantness and emotional responsiveness in people with dementia compared to healthy controls. Clinically, depression is a significant burden for older people with dementia and chronic pain. The relationship between pain and other neuropsychiatric symptoms is controversial, and there is insufficient evidence on which to base conclusions. Some of the most important dementia-related changes may arise in the cognitive domain, including impairments of semantic and episodic memory for pain, executive function, and pain anticipation. Changes in brain activation and interconnectivity support many of these conclusions. Despite methodological limitations, we conclude there are compelling preliminary data to support a biopsychosocial framework of pain and dementia. Future research directions, especially the need for improved assessment tools, are highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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3. Do Correlates of Pain-Related Stoicism and Cautiousness Differ in Younger and Older People With Advanced Cancer?
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Mah, Kenneth, Tran, Kim T., Gauthier, Lynn R., Rodin, Gary, Zimmermann, Camilla, Warr, David, Librach, S. Lawrence, Moore, Malcolm, Shepherd, Frances A., and Gagliese, Lucia
- Abstract
Age differences are not evident in pain-related stoicism and cautiousness in people with cancer pain. Little is known about the factors associated with these pain-related attitudes or age-related patterns in these associations. The present cross-sectional study investigated the biopsychosocial correlates of the attitudes in younger and older patients with advanced cancer. Pain-related stoicism (fortitude, concealment, superiority) and cautiousness (self-doubt, reluctance) were assessed using the Pain Attitudes Questionnaire-Revised (PAQ-R). Participants, 155 younger (younger than 60 years old) and 114 older (60 years old or older) patients with advanced cancer completed the PAQ-R and measures of sociodemographic and medical characteristics, pain intensity, cognitive-affective pain-related responses, physical functioning, psychological distress and well-being, and psychosocial functioning. Backwards regression analyses identified correlates for each PAQ-R factor separately for younger and older patients. Activity engagement was a frequent correlate, but its relationship with concealment was the only association common to both age groups. Younger and older patients exhibited different avoidance-related constructs suggesting relational challenges in the former group (avoidant attachment) and intrapersonal fear in the latter (cognitive avoidance). Medical correlates also showed age differences: younger patients showed symptom-focused correlates, whereas older patients showed aging-related correlates. Findings support a biopsychosocial framework of cancer-pain adaptation incorporating a lifespan-developmental perspective.
Perspective: To our knowledge, this article is the first to identify biopsychosocial correlates of stoic and cautious attitudes toward cancer pain in younger and older patients with advanced cancer. Findings highlight possible age-related motivations for greater pain-related stoicism or cautiousness and can potentially inform interventions addressing challenges in cancer-pain adaptation in advanced cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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4. Psychometric Evaluation of the Pain Attitudes Questionnaire-Revised for People With Advanced Cancer.
- Author
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Mah, Kenneth, Tran, Kim T., Gauthier, Lynn R., Rodin, Gary, Zimmermann, Camilla, Warr, David, Librach, S. Lawrence, Moore, Malcolm, Shepherd, Frances A., and Gagliese, Lucia
- Abstract
Pain-related stoicism and cautiousness are theorized to be more prevalent in older than younger patients and to lead to greater pain under-reporting and consequently inadequate pain management in older patients. The Pain Attitudes Questionnaire-Revised (PAQ-R), which measures 5 pain-related stoicism (fortitude, concealment, superiority) and cautiousness (self-doubt, reluctance) factors in chronic pain, can help test this hypothesis in advanced cancer but requires validation. We conducted a psychometric evaluation of the PAQ-R in 155 younger (younger than 60 years) and 114 older (aged 60 years and older) patients with advanced cancer. Participants showed disagreement with self-doubt items and floor effects with the subscale. Confirmatory factor analyses revealed good fit of the PAQ-R's 5 factors to younger and older groups' data but collinearity between fortitude and concealment. Multisample confirmatory factor analyses supported partial scalar invariance between age groups. Few hypothesized age-related differences were observed. Younger patients reported higher superiority scores than older patients. Whereas older patients showed greater fortitude and superiority with lower average pain intensity, younger patients showed greater concealment or fortitude with greater worst and average pain intensity. Furthermore, whereas older patients displayed greater superiority with lower interference in relations with others, younger patients displayed greater concealment and superiority with greater interference in walking ability and greater concealment and self-doubt with more interference in relations with others. Cross-validation of the PAQ-R's factor structure and identification of pathways to the factors and effect on pain-related outcomes using multivariate approaches are warranted.
Perspective: This article presents the psychometric properties of a measure of 2 particular pain-related attitudes. The measure can help clarify whether these attitudes adversely influence pain reporting in older patients with advanced cancer as hypothesized and, in turn, explain the inadequate pain management frequently reported with this clinical group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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5. Validation of the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2 in Younger and Older People With Cancer Pain.
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Gauthier, Lynn R., Young, Alycia, Dworkin, Robert H., Rodin, Gary, Zimmermann, Camilla, Warr, David, Lawrence Librach, S., Moore, Malcolm, Shepherd, Frances A., Riddell, Rebecca Pillai, Macpherson, Alison, Melzack, Ronald, and Gagliese, Lucia
- Abstract
Pain is among the most common symptoms of cancer. Because cancer can occur at any age, it is imperative that pain assessment tools are valid for use across the adult lifespan. The Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2 (SF-MPQ-2) is a valid and reliable tool for the assessment of the multidimensional qualities of pain in people with chronic nonmalignant pain, but its psychometric properties in people with cancer pain and in older versus younger people require investigation. This study evaluated age differences in the validity, reliability, and use of the SF-MPQ-2 in 244 people with advanced cancer and pain. We confirmed the previously reported 4-factor solution in older (⩾60 years) and younger (<60 years) patients. Internal consistency reliability and convergent validity were similar across age groups, although the SF-MPQ-2 sensory subscales were correlated with mental health quality of life in older, but not younger, patients. Older and younger patients selected the same words with the same intensity to describe their pain. The most commonly selected words in both age groups were aching, tiring-exhausting, sharp, and dull. These results demonstrate that the SF-MPQ-2 is appropriate for use across the adult lifespan in people with cancer pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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6. The Communal Coping Model and Cancer Pain: The Roles of Catastrophizing and Attachment Style.
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Gauthier, Lynn R., Rodin, Gary, Zimmermann, Camilla, Warr, David, Librach, S. Lawrence, Moore, Malcolm, Shepherd, Frances A., and Gagliese, Lucia
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Abstract: Pain is among the most common symptoms of cancer, with impacts on multiple domains of well-being. Biopsychosocial factors play an important role in adjustment to cancer pain. The Communal Coping Model (CCM), which may elucidate the social context of cancer pain, suggests that people catastrophize to convey distress and elicit support. Attachment style, one''s ability to elicit and respond to available support, may be an important factor, but this has not been tested in people with cancer pain. This study examined pain catastrophizing, attachment style and relational context in relation to perceived solicitous, distracting, and punishing responses of significant others to pain in 191 patients with advanced cancer. Consistent with the CCM, higher pain catastrophizing was related to more frequent solicitous and distracting responses. Pain catastrophizing, attachment anxiety, and significant other type interacted in relation to punishing responses. Higher pain catastrophizing was related to less frequent punishing responses only in anxiously attached patients who identified their spouse/partner as their significant other. These results provide support for the CCM of cancer pain, and contribute to refinement of the model. Future research that includes patients and their caregivers is required to further explicate the social context of cancer pain. Perspective: This article investigates the Communal Coping Model in people with cancer pain. In partial support of the model, we found that pain catastrophizing was related to more frequent solicitous and distracting responses but less frequent punishing responses only in anxiously attached patients who identified their spouse/partner as their significant other. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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7. Managing Opioids, Including Misuse and Addiction, in Patients with Serious Illness in Ambulatory Palliative Care: a Qualitative Study (S710).
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Merlin, Jessica, Young, Sarah, Arnold, Robert, Bulls, Hailey, Childers, Julie, Gauthier, Lynn, Giannitrapani, Karleen, Kavalieratos, Dio, Schenker, Yael, Wilson, J. Deanna, and Liebschutz, Jane
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PALLIATIVE treatment , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *DISEASES , *OPIOIDS , *QUALITATIVE research - Published
- 2020
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8. Managing Opioids, Including Misuse and Addiction, in Patients with Serious Illness in Ambulatory Palliative Care: a qualitative study (GP765).
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Merlin, Jessica, Young, Sarah, Arnold, Robert, Bulls, Hailey, Childers, Julie, Gauthier, Lynn, Giannitrapani, Karleen, Kavalieratos, Dio, Schenker, Yael, Wilson, J. Deanna, and Liebschutz, Jane
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PALLIATIVE treatment , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *DISEASES , *OPIOIDS , *QUALITATIVE research - Published
- 2020
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9. Health Care Professionals' Reports of Cancer Pain Cues Among Older People With Delirium: A Qualitative-Quantitative Content Analysis.
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Graham, Carol A., Chaves, Gabriela, Harrison, Rebecca, Gauthier, Lynn R., Nissim, Rinat, Zimmermann, Camilla, Chan, Vincent, Rodin, Gary, Stevens, Bonnie, and Gagliese, Lucia
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MEDICAL personnel , *CANCER pain , *OLDER people , *DELIRIUM , *OLDER patients - Abstract
Context: Health care professionals (HCPs) currently judge pain presence and intensity in patients with delirium despite the lack of a valid, standardized assessment protocol. However, little is known about how they make these judgments. This information is essential to develop a valid and reliable assessment tool.Objectives: To identify pain cues that HCPs report to judge pain in patients with delirium and to examine whether the pain cues differed based on patient cognitive status and delirium subtype.Methods: Mixed qualitative-quantitative design. Doctors and nurses were recruited. All participants provided written informed consent, and before the recorded interview, demographic information was collected; then participants were asked to describe their practices and beliefs regarding pain assessment and management with older patients who are cognitively intact and patients with delirium. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and coded for pain cues. Coded data were imported into SPSS software (IBM SPSS Statistics Version 24; IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY) to conduct bivariate analyses.Results: The pain cue self-report was stated more often for intact than for delirium patients (χ2 [1; N = 106] = 22.56; P < 0.001). HCPs stated yelling (χ2 [2; N = 159] = 11.14; P = 0.004), when describing pain in hyperactive than in hypoactive and mixed delirium patients; and significantly more HCPs stated grimace (χ2 [2; N = 159] = 6.88; P = 0.03), when describing pain in hypoactive than hyperactive and mixed patients.Conclusion: This study outlines how HCPs conduct pain assessment in patients who are delirious and, also, identifies pain behavior profiles for the subtypes of delirium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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