Analysis on Pain Introduction Pain is one of the most common challenging complains by patients. Pain in general is a very uncomfortable feeling. Studies have shown that pain can affect the quality of life of individuals (Ferrel, 1995). Over 100 million Americans suffer from chronic pain. This is the kind of pain that lasts for more then 6 months. It can be mild or excruciating pain (Ratini, 2014). Nurse researchers have spent the last 30 years trying to study pain management using both pain measurements
A study from the Pain Journal found that chronic musculoskeletal pain was more common than chronic neuropathic pain, however, neuropathic pain was found to be more severe and debilitating. Studies show that approximately 65%-85% of individuals with spinal cord injuries suffer from chronic pain. Many patients with spinal cord injuries will develop “severe/excruciating” neuropathic pain below the level of their injury. (Siddall et all, 2003). United States SCI veterans are susceptible to chronic
1 Pain: Concept Analysis Paper Purdue University Calumet 2 Pain: A Concept Analysis Everywhere you turn you see ad's for pain relief, or people talking about their pain. Google the word pain and you have almost 900 million searches. There are more than 2.9 millions scholarly articles written on pain. It is portrayed by artists such as Mexican painter Frida Kahlo who was impaled during
perceive acute and chronic pain differently. The perception of pain is subjective to each individual person based on his or her own mood, emotional state, and prior experience. A functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) shows that there is no difference between someone with chronic pain compared to a person with an acute pain. The fMRI shows that pain perception and related brain stimulation patterns were virtually undistinguishable between chronic and acute pain. Most of the United States
Pediatric pain management is measured subjectively because it is based off of what the patient says or how the nurse interprets the pain scale. Pain is rated using different scales, unfortunately these different scales could yield different results. Nurses are trained to use pediatric pain scales to analyze and treat pain but parents are not supplied with the tools to manage pain when the patient goes home. With 84% of all pediatric surgical procedures performed on an outpatient basis, the importance
Coping with pain and adverse experiences of physical conditions (Physical symptoms) Pain is defined as “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage” (Merskey et al., 1979). The medical conditions are various in different types of pain; acute (procedure-related pain, postoperative pain, trauma-associated pain, acute pain due to chronic illness), recurrent, and chronic pain. Pain present unique challenges for
In the article “The Pain Scale”, Biss is giving a proposal to definition of the pain scale. The author scaled the pain in a numeric values represented by a scale from zero to ten. First, is the zero scale. As Biss described herself as some one who generate question instead of answering them, she thinks that pain cannot be eliminated. Meaning, zero cannot explain a situation, just like its numerical value, we cannot apply some computational operations to it. Then, the author goes to explain how zero
Pain management in palliative care has been inadequately addressed and treated by clinicians in recent years (Wilkie and Ezenwa, 2012). This paper will identify and explore a few of the many of the contributing factors to the inadequate management of pain as it relates to palliative care, including the impact of pain management, inadequate education, and misconceptions. In an effort to understand the underlying themes and corresponding actions to address this disparity, it is first necessary to understand
Pain can be classified based on its type. It can be acute, cancer or chronic of by pathophysiology that can either be visceral or somatic. Neuropathic pain is the pain ensuing from injury to the tissues hence causing nerve dysfunction. Neuropathic pain is therefore described as a shooting, throbbing, or cold sensation. Cancer pain can also be defined as the pain that arises from both neuropathic and nociceptive pain. It is therefore important to identify the mechanisms as well as different forms
Introduction The International Association for the study of Pain (IASP, 2012) define neuropathic pain as a complex type of pain in the nervous system caused or initiated by its primary lesion or dysfunction. Taverner (2014) has described it as “pain without purpose” because it serves no useful signalling role and does not have any beneficial effect. There is a further definition provided by the IASP neuropathic pain special group of interest: “Pain arising as a direct consequence of a lesion or disease