Military Veterans’ Perspectives on Postoperative Opioid Use: A Secondary Analysis of Qualitative Data

This qualitative analysis of interviews with surgical patients who received a brief perioperative psychological intervention, in conjunction with standard medical perioperative care, elucidates patient perspectives on the use of pain self-management skills in relation to postoperative analgesics. Th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of perianesthesia nursing 2023-06, Vol.38 (3), p.483-487
Hauptverfasser: Conrad, Mandy, Steffensmeier, Kenda Stewart, Van Tiem, Jennifer, Obrecht, Ashlie, Mares, Jasmine, Mosher, Hilary J., Weg, Mark W. Vander, Sibenaller, Zita, Stout, Lori, Patel, Parimal, Hadlandsmyth, Katherine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This qualitative analysis of interviews with surgical patients who received a brief perioperative psychological intervention, in conjunction with standard medical perioperative care, elucidates patient perspectives on the use of pain self-management skills in relation to postoperative analgesics. This study is a secondary analysis of qualitative data from a randomized controlled trial. Participants (N = 21) were rural-dwelling United States Military Veterans from a mixed surgical sample who were randomized to receive a manual-based, telephone-based Perioperative Pain Self-management intervention consisting of a total of four pre- and postoperative contacts. Semi-structured qualitative interviews elicited participant feedback on the cognitive-behavioral intervention. Data was analyzed by two qualitative experts using MAXQDA software. Key word analyses focused on mention of analgesics in interviews. Interviews revealed a dominant theme of ambivalence towards postoperative use of opioids. An additional theme concerned the varied ways acquiring pain self-management skills impacted postoperative opioid (and non-opioid analgesic) consumption. Participants reported that employment of pain self-management strategies reduced reliance on pharmacology for pain relief, prolonged the time between doses, took the “edge off” pain, and increased pain management self-efficacy. Perioperative patient education may benefit from inclusion of teaching non-pharmacologic pain self-management skills and collaborative planning with patients regarding how to use these skills in conjunction with opioid and non-opioid analgesics. Perianesthesia nurses may be in a critical position to provide interdisciplinary postoperative patient education that may optimize postoperative pain management while minimizing risks associated with prolonged opioid use.
ISSN:1089-9472
1532-8473
1532-8473
DOI:10.1016/j.jopan.2022.09.006