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Cancer Pain Management
Oncology Nursing Society Position on Cancer Pain Management
Pain is a common symptom experienced by patients with cancer. Whether as a
result of disease or disease-related treatment, pain causes significant
physical and psychosocial burdens. A uniquely personal experience, pain
markedly impacts the quality of an individual’s life, increases
vulnerability in an already vulnerable population, and engenders dependence
on healthcare providers for access to adequate pain management. Cancer
pain frequently is assessed and treated inadequately (Miaskowski et al.,
2004; National Comprehensive Cancer Network, 2005).
Effective pain management may include pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic
measures (Menefee & Monti, 2005; Pharo & Zhou, 2005). Because
oncology nurses embrace holistic care and have sustained contact with
patients throughout the continuum of cancer care, they are in a position
to identify undertreated and untreated cancer pain and advocate for its
relief. As members of interdisciplinary teams involved in practice, education,
administration, and research, oncology nurses are in a pivotal position
to improve cancer pain management.
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (2005) reported that cancer
pain can be well controlled in the vast majority of patients if evidence-based
guidelines are applied, monitored, and individualized and patients engage
in informed decision making for managing their pain.
It Is the Position of ONS That:
- All people with cancer have a right to optimal pain relief that includes
culturally relevant and sensitive pain education, assessment, and management.
- The public, people with cancer, and significant others must
be educated about the right to relief from cancer pain.
- Regulatory, legislative, economic, and other barriers to effective
cancer pain management must be eliminated.
- Cancer pain prevention and treatment are essential elements
of quality cancer care throughout all phases of the cancer care continuum.
- Healthcare professionals, primarily nurses, pharmacists, and
physicians, are accountable to effectively manage cancer pain.
- All professionals caring for patients with cancer have an ethical
responsibility to acquire and use current knowledge and skills and to
implement evidence-based pain management guidelines.
- Placebos should not be used to assess or manage cancer pain,
determine if the pain is “real,” or diagnose psychological
symptoms, such as anxiety, associated with pain.
- Comprehensive cancer pain management is a multidisciplinary
and collaborative effort that must include ongoing individual assessment,
planning, intervention, and evaluation of pain and pain relief. Comprehensive
pain management addresses physical, psychological, spiritual, and sociocultural
effects of unrelieved pain.
- Professional, postgraduate, and continuing education cancer
care curricula for nurses and other healthcare providers must include
theoretical content and clinical experiences related to cancer pain
and its management.
- The conduct of cancer pain research and the evidence-based findings
in education and practice are priorities for nurses and ONS.
- Barriers to effective cancer pain management must be eliminated.
- All people with pain must be recognized, with special emphasis
placed on the populations known to be at high risk for suboptimal pain
management (i.e., children; the elderly; minority populations; women;
people with a history of previous or active substance abuse; those with
limited financial resources, social support systems, and/or access to
health care; individuals with cognitive or psychosocial impairment;
and those with previous histories of analgesic allergies and/or metabolic
alterations).
- Healthcare systems and clinicians providing care to patients
with cancer are responsible for adopting and monitoring institutional
and clinical guidelines for cancer pain management and symptoms related
to its treatment. Healthcare systems must establish mechanisms for continuous
evaluation of pain outcomes in patients at risk for cancer pain.
- Oncology nurses have a professional obligation to ensure that
institutional and clinical standards for cancer pain management are
adopted.
- Healthcare providers must adopt and prioritize pain as the “fifth
vital sign” and standardize pain assessment throughout their workplaces.
- Oncology nurses must actively involve all patients, as well
as their family caregivers and significant others, in the development
of a pain management plan of care and encourage open communication for
the reporting of pain at all times.
- Healthcare facilities must establish minimum standards for clinicians’
pain assessment skills.
- Organizations and healthcare facilities must adopt and support
the use of evidence-based pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic interventions
and establish minimum standards for competency in their use.
- Oncology nurses must adopt pain management as a priority in
continuous quality improvement initiatives.
References
Menefee, L.A., & Monti, D.A. (2005). Nonpharmacologic and complementary
approaches to cancer pain management. Journal of the American Osteopathic
Association, 105(11, Suppl. 5), S15–S20.
Miaskowski, C., Cleary, J., Burney, R., Coyne, P.J., Finley, R., Foster,
R., et al. (2004). Guideline for the management of cancer pain in adults
and children. Glenview, IL: American Pain Society.
National Comprehensive Cancer Network. (2005). Cancer pain treatment guidelines—Version
II, August 2005. Retrieved September 6, 2006, from http://www.nccn.org/patients/patient_gls/_english/_pain/contents.asp
Pharo, G.H., & Zhou, L. (2005). Pharmacologic management of cancer
pain. Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, 105(11, Suppl.
5), S21–S28.
Approved by the ONS Board of Directors, 4/98;
revised 11/00, 6/02, 10/04, 10/06.
To obtain copies of the ONS Position "Cancer Pain Management," contact the customer Service Center at the ONS National Office at 125 Enterprise Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15275-1214 (866-257-4ONS; customer.service@ons.org). PDF version may be downloaded by clicking here.
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