P. Salmon et A. Manyande, GOOD PATIENTS COPE WITH THEIR PAIN - POSTOPERATIVE ANALGESIA AND NURSES PERCEPTIONS OF THEIR PATIENTS PAIN, Pain, 68(1), 1996, pp. 63-68
Patients routinely receive less analgesia postoperatively than they ne
ed. Previous attempts to understand this have examined the nurses' att
itudes to analgesia and their ability to assess accurately the intensi
ty of their patients' pain. The present study examined three hypothese
s derived from an alternative view that undermedication results from p
atients failing to disclose their difficulty in coping with pain becau
se this would lead to disapproval by nurses: (i) that analgesic intake
is related, not to pain intensity but to patients' feelings of being
unable to cope with pain and to nurses' assessment of their inability
to cope; (ii) that nurses specifically underestimate patients' ability
to cope with their pain; and (iii) that poor coping with pain is seen
by nurses as indicative of a 'bad' patient. Pain ratings were complet
ed by 56 patients undergoing minor abdominal surgery; nurses completed
similar scales to show their perception of patients' pain, as well as
a specially devised scale which measured how negatively or positively
they felt about their patients. Nurses were sensitive to the intensit
y of their patients' pain, but underestimated how well patients felt t
hey coped with pain and how much they wanted analgesia. Patients who e
xperienced the worst pain, or whom the nurses perceived as coping leas
t well with their pain, were evaluated by the nurses as unpopular and
demanding.