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Current practices in cancer pain management in Asia: a survey of patients and physicians across 10 countries.

Authors :
Kim, Yong‐Chul
Ahn, Jin Seok
Calimag, Maria Minerva P.
Chao, Ta Chung
Ho, Kok Yuen
Tho, Lye Mun
Xia, Zhong‐Jun
Ward, Lois
Moon, Hanlim
Bhagat, Abhishek
Source :
Cancer Medicine; Aug2015, Vol. 4 Issue 8, p1196-1204, 9p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In order to implement more effective policies for cancer pain management, a better understanding of current practices is needed. Physicians managing cancer pain and patients experiencing cancer pain were randomly surveyed across 10 Asian countries to assess attitudes and perceptions toward cancer pain management. A total of 463 physicians (77.3% oncologists) with a median experience of 13 years were included. Medical school training on opioid use was considered inadequate by 30.5% of physicians and 55.9% indicated ≤10 h of continuing medical education ( CME). Of the 1190 patients included, 1026 reported moderate-to-severe pain (median duration, 12 months). Discordance was observed between physician and patient outcomes on pain assessment with 88.3% of physicians reporting pain quantification, while 49.5% of patients claimed that no scale was used. Inadequate assessment of pain was recognized as a barrier to therapy optimization by 49.7% of physicians. Additional barriers identified were patients' reluctance owing to fear of addiction (67.2%) and adverse events (65.0%), patients' reluctance to report pain (52.5%), excessive regulations (48.0%) and reluctance to prescribe opioids (42.8%). Opioid use was confirmed only in 53.2% (286/538) of patients remembering their medication. Pain affected the activities of daily living for 81.3% of patients. These findings highlight the need for better training and CME opportunities for cancer pain management in Asia. Collaborative efforts between physicians, patients, policy makers, and related parties may assist in overcoming the barriers identified. Addressing the opioid stigma and enhancing awareness is vital to improving current standards of patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457634
Volume :
4
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cancer Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108756014
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.471