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Article
“Asking Is Never Bad, I Would Venture on That”: Patients’ Perspectives on Routine Pain Screening in VA Primary Care
Pain Medicine (2020)
  • Karleen F. Giannitrapani, VA Palo Alto Health Care System
  • Marie C. Haverfield, San Jose State University
  • Natalie K. Lo, VA Palo Alto Health Care System
  • Matthew D. McCaa, VA Palo Alto Health Care System
  • Christine Timko, Stanford University
  • Steven K. Dobscha, Oregon Health & Science University
  • Robert D. Kerns, Yale School of Medicine
  • Karl A Lorenz, VA Palo Alto Health Care System
Abstract
Objective
Screening for pain in routine care is one of the efforts that the Veterans Health Administration has adopted in its national pain management strategy. We aimed to understand patients’ perspectives and preferences about the experience of being screened for pain in primary care.

Design
Semistructured interviews captured patient perceptions and preferences of pain screening, assessment, and management.

Subjects
We completed interviews with 36 patients: 29 males and seven females ranging in age from 28 to 94 years from three geographically distinct VA health care systems.

Methods
We evaluated transcripts using constant comparison and identified emergent themes.

Results
Theme 1: Pain screening can “determine the tone of the examination”; Theme 2: Screening can initiate communication about pain; Theme 3: Screening can facilitate patient recall and reflection; Theme 4: Screening for pain may help identify under-reported psychological pain, mental distress, and suicidality; Theme 5: Patient recommendations about how to improve screening for pain.

Conclusion
Our results indicate that patients perceive meaningful, positive impacts of routine pain screening that as yet have not been considered in the literature. Specifically, screening for pain may help capture mental health concerns that may otherwise not emerge.
Keywords
  • pain,
  • veterans
Publication Date
March 6, 2020
DOI
10.1093/pm/pnaa016
Publisher Statement
SJSU users: Use the following link to login and access the article via SJSU databases.
Citation Information
Karleen F. Giannitrapani, Marie C. Haverfield, Natalie K. Lo, Matthew D. McCaa, et al.. "“Asking Is Never Bad, I Would Venture on That”: Patients’ Perspectives on Routine Pain Screening in VA Primary Care" Pain Medicine Vol. 21 Iss. 10 (2020) p. 2163 - 2171
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marie-haverfield/21/