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Pain characteristics and self‐rated health after elective orthopaedic surgery – a cross‐sectional survey
Author(s) -
Lindberg Maren F,
Grov Ellen K,
Gay Caryl L,
Rustøen Tone,
Granheim Tove I,
Amlie Einar,
Lerdal Anners
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.12149
Subject(s) - medicine , physical therapy , cross sectional study , brief pain inventory , medical record , elective surgery , chronic pain , surgery , pathology
Aims and objectives To describe the postoperative pain and to examine the relationship between pain intensity, pain interference and self‐rated health after elective orthopaedic surgery. Background Pain is a problem for many surgical inpatients and can lead to postoperative complications. Limited knowledge exists about the relationship between postoperative pain, function and self‐rated health. Design Cross‐sectional survey. Methods Pain characteristics, self‐rated health, sociodemographic status and comorbidity were measured in 123 elective orthopaedic inpatients recruited consecutively from a hospital in eastern Norway in 2012. On the day they were discharged from the surgical unit, patients completed items about pain intensity and pain interference from the Brief Pain Inventory and about self‐rated health from the Medical Outcome Short Form‐36 Health Survey. Clinical data were retrieved from the medical records. Patients were divided into three diagnostic groups: shoulder surgery, hip or knee replacement and other surgery. Results Mean age was 60 years ( SD 17·2) and 50% were females. Average pain intensity was 4·2 ( SD 2·2) on a 0–10 numeric rating scale and 60% reported moderate/severe pain during the entire hospital stay. Shoulder surgery patients reported significantly higher pain intensity compared to other surgical groups. Pain interfered mostly with daily activity and sleep. Higher pain intensity was significantly associated with poorer self‐rated health. The linear regression analysis showed that average pain intensity was related to poorer self‐rated health, controlling for sociodemographic variables and pain interference with function. Conclusion High pain intensity is related to poorer self‐rated health. Postoperative pain is undermanaged, affects functional areas and could delay rehabilitation. Relevance to clinical practice Postoperative pain management should be given high priority after elective orthopaedic surgery, in order to improve self‐rated health and function. Pain treatment for shoulder surgery patients may require more attention than it currently receives.