Title of article :
Nurses’ Perspectives on the Barriers and Facilitators of Pain Management in Hospitalized Patients
Author/Authors :
Amiri, Roya Trauma Nursing Research Center - Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Safa, Azadeh Trauma Nursing Research Center - Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Izadi-Avanji, Fateme Sadat Trauma Nursing Research Center - Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Azizi-Fini, Ismail Trauma Nursing Research Center - Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Izadi-Dastjerdi, Elham Department of Nursing - Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Pain management is among the key tasks of nurses. Numerous studies have
investigated the barriers and facilitators of pain management with conflicting results. The current
study investigated the Iranian nurses’ perspectives in terms of the barriers and facilitators of pain
management in hospitalized patients.
Methods: This was a cross-sectional study. A total of 321 nurses working in a large general
teaching hospital were recruited by the census method. A two-part, self-report questionnaire,
including questions on nurses' characteristics and barriers and facilitators of pain management,
was applied to collect data. The questionnaire was developed by researchers using a literature
review. The questionaries’ reliability was assessed through a test-retest with a correlation
coefficient of 0.89. SPSS was used for statistical data analysis. Descriptive statistics (frequency,
percentage, mean, and standard deviation) were applied to analyze the data.
Results: Insufficient nurse/patient ratio (Mean±SD: 3.31±0.87), excessive demand for pain
medications by the patients (3.12±0.95), the spoken language difference between physician
and patient (3.01±0.85), the ignorance of pain as a priority in care (2.94±0.98), and failure to
precise pain assessment (2.90±0.89) were determined by the nurses, as the main barriers to
pain management, respectively. The studied nurses also perceived the attendance of in-service
courses of pain management (3.39±0.63), having sufficient pain management skills (3.24±0.76),
motivation for relieving the patient’s pain (3.24±0.81), effective nurse-physician relationship
(3.26±0.68), proper supervision of the organization on a timely patient visit by the physician
(3.12±0.92), and patient cooperation in pain management (3.21±0.75), as the main facilitators of
pain management, respectively.
Conclusion: The establishment of in-service education programs on pain management and
strengthening the managerial processes, such as staffing and supervision, can facilitate pain
management in hospitalized patients by nurses.
Keywords :
Nurse , Facilitators , Barriers , Pain management , Pain
Journal title :
Journal of Client-Centered Nursing Care