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Self-Efficacy Survey Study of Pain Self-Management in Patients with Cancer

Authors
Anderson, A.Starkweather, A.Cong, X.Kim, K.Schulman-Green, D.Judge, M.Xu, W.Zhang, Y.
Issue Date
8월-2022
Publisher
W.B. Saunders
Citation
Pain Management Nursing, v.23, no.4, pp.486 - 493
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Pain Management Nursing
Volume
23
Number
4
Start Page
486
End Page
493
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/140207
DOI
10.1016/j.pmn.2021.10.002
ISSN
1524-9042
Abstract
Background: Cancer pain prevalence remains high, and variance in self-efficacy for managing pain may explain why some patients experience greater pain severity. Aim: This study explored perceptions of self-efficacy in relation to cancer pain severity and treatment related characteristics. Method: A descriptive cross-sectional survey was administered to 50 cancer outpatients. Data analysis involved descriptive and correlational statistical analyses. Results: Self-efficacy to manage pain was significantly associated with time since diagnosis and ability to deal with frustration, and inversely associated with pain severity level. A large proportion of patients reported low satisfaction self-managing their pain. Most patients reported independently self-managing their cancer pain; however, satisfaction with pain management was low for a large proportion of patients. Time since cancer diagnosis and ability to deal with frustration due to cancer pain were positively associated with cancer pain self-efficacy, whereas pain self-efficacy had a significant inverse correlation with cancer pain severity. Conclusions: Enhancing self-efficacy to self-manage under-treated cancer pain is important with implications for improving pain outcomes and quality of life. Further investigation on unmet needs and preferences for cancer pain self-management support is warranted. © 2021
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