Pharmacologic and Non-Pharmacologic Treatments for Chronic Pain Used by Patients with Pain, HIV, and Depression

The objective of this study was to understand pain treatment utilization, perceived efficacy, and differences in utilization by gender, clinic site, chronicity of pain, pain severity, and depression severity among people living with HIV (PLWH), chronic pain, and elevated depression symptoms. Partici...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS and behavior 2022-03, Vol.26 (3), p.864-873
Hauptverfasser: Uebelacker, Lisa A., Cherenack, Emily M., Busch, Andrew, Baker, Jason V., Pinkston, Megan, Gleason, Neil, Madden, Stephanie, Caviness, Celeste M., Stein, Michael D.
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 864
container_title AIDS and behavior
container_volume 26
creator Uebelacker, Lisa A.
Cherenack, Emily M.
Busch, Andrew
Baker, Jason V.
Pinkston, Megan
Gleason, Neil
Madden, Stephanie
Caviness, Celeste M.
Stein, Michael D.
description The objective of this study was to understand pain treatment utilization, perceived efficacy, and differences in utilization by gender, clinic site, chronicity of pain, pain severity, and depression severity among people living with HIV (PLWH), chronic pain, and elevated depression symptoms. Participants included 187 PLWH at three HIV clinics in the U.S. Overall, 85% of participants reported taking a pain medication. One quarter (25%) reported non-pharmacological professional treatments for pain (e.g., massage, physical therapy), 60% reported mind–body treatments, including exercise, meditation, and yoga, and 62% reported other non-pharmacological self-administered treatments (e.g., heat/cold). Most pain treatments were considered “slightly helpful” or “moderately helpful.” Non-pharmacological self-administered treatments were more commonly used among women than men and among individuals with constant vs. intermittent pain. Further research is needed to evaluate the efficacy of the preferred analgesic modalities of PLWH.
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source MEDLINE; Springer Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Analgesics
Chronic pain
Chronic Pain - drug therapy
Depression - therapy
Female
Gender differences
Health behavior
Health Psychology
HIV
HIV Infections - complications
Human immunodeficiency virus
Humans
Infectious Diseases
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Meditation
Men
Mental depression
Original Paper
Pain
Pain perception
Pharmacology
Public Health
Treatment methods
Yoga
title Pharmacologic and Non-Pharmacologic Treatments for Chronic Pain Used by Patients with Pain, HIV, and Depression
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