Pain, comorbidities, and clinical decision-making: conceptualization, development, and pilot testing of the Pain in Aging, Educational Assessment of Need instrument.

Journal: Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland)

Volume: 5

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Division of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology, Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States. Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center, VA Maryland Health Care System, Baltimore, MD, United States. Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitative Science, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA, United States. Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center, Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, Little Rock, AR, United States. Department of Pharmacy Practice, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville School of Pharmacy, Edwardsville, IL, United States. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.

Abstract summary 

Pain is highly prevalent in older adults and often contextualized by multiple clinical conditions (pain comorbidities). Pain comorbidities increase with age and this makes clinical decisions more complex. To address gaps in clinical training and geriatric pain management, we established the Pain in Aging-Educational Assessment of Need (PAEAN) project to appraise the impacts of medical and mental health conditions on clinical decision-making regarding older adults with pain. We here report development and pilot testing of the PAEAN survey instrument to assess clinician perspectives.Mixed-methods approaches were used. Scoping review methodology was applied to appraise both research literature and selected Medicare-based data. A geographically and professionally diverse interprofessional advisory panel of experts in pain research, medical education, and geriatrics was formed to advise development of the list of pain comorbidities potentially impacting healthcare professional clinical decision-making. A survey instrument was developed, and pilot tested by diverse licensed healthcare practitioners from 2 institutions. Respondents were asked to rate agreement regarding clinical decision-making impact using a 5-point Likert scale. Items were scored for percent agreement.Scoping reviews indicated that pain conditions and comorbidities are prevalent in older adults but not universally recognized. We found no research literature directly guiding pain educators in designing pain education modules that mirror older adult clinical complexity. The interprofessional advisory panel identified 26 common clinical conditions for inclusion in the pilot PAEAN instrument. Conditions fell into three main categories: "major medical", i.e., cardio-vascular-pulmonary; metabolic; and neuropsychiatric/age-related. The instrument was pilot tested by surveying clinically active healthcare providers, e.g., physicians, nurse practitioners, who all responded completely. Median survey completion time was less than 3 min.This study, developing and pilot testing our "Pain in Aging-Educational Assessment of Need" (PAEAN) instrument, suggests that 1) many clinical conditions impact pain clinical decision-making, and 2) surveying healthcare practitioners about the impact of pain comorbidities on clinical decision-making for older adults is highly feasible. Given the challenges intrinsic to safe and effective clinical care of older adults with pain, and attendant risks, together with the paucity of existing relevant work, much more education and research are needed.

Authors & Co-authors:  Siaton Hogans Frey-Law Brown Herndon Buenaver

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  Geetha D, Jaisoorya TS, Sunil Kumar G, Manoj L, Gokul GR, Aakash B, et al. . Disentangling comorbidity in chronic pain: a study in primary health care settings from India. PLoS One. (2020) 15(11):e0242865. 10.1371/journal.pone.0242865
Authors :  6
Identifiers
Doi : 1254792
SSN : 2673-561X
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
chronic pain;clinical decision-making;geriatric;interdisciplinary;interprofessional;multimorbidity;pain education;survey instrument
Study Design
Study Approach
Mixed-Methods
Country of Study
Publication Country
Switzerland