2019
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-019-1613-z
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Nurses’ knowledge, perceived barriers, and practices regarding cancer pain management: a cross-sectional study from Palestine

Abstract: Background Accurate knowledge and good pain evaluation and documentation practices should be present for efficient pain management. In this study, we aimed to assess the knowledge and practices of nurses relating to the management of cancer pain in Palestine, and to determine the barriers to efficient pain control in cancer patients. Methods A cross-sectional survey took place at 8 hospitals across Northern West Bank. A convenience sample of 220 Nurses working in govern… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…Similar to previous studies, knowledge about medications that effectively relieve the pain, the route of administration, tolerance, and side effects were mainly poor among the nurses. 29 , 30 The participants showed better knowledge about adjusting opioid analgesics for patients after an initial dose, combining analgesics, the effectiveness of a single dose of anticonvulsant drugs, the effectiveness of benzodiazepines as pain relievers, and substance abuse/physical dependence related to the analgesic. However, we found insufficient knowledge in the areas of pharmacology (equivalent doses of analgesia, duration of the action of analgesia, types of analgesics for postoperative pain), opioid-induced respiratory depression and the doses of PRN morphine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar to previous studies, knowledge about medications that effectively relieve the pain, the route of administration, tolerance, and side effects were mainly poor among the nurses. 29 , 30 The participants showed better knowledge about adjusting opioid analgesics for patients after an initial dose, combining analgesics, the effectiveness of a single dose of anticonvulsant drugs, the effectiveness of benzodiazepines as pain relievers, and substance abuse/physical dependence related to the analgesic. However, we found insufficient knowledge in the areas of pharmacology (equivalent doses of analgesia, duration of the action of analgesia, types of analgesics for postoperative pain), opioid-induced respiratory depression and the doses of PRN morphine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The current study was carried out to explore the barriers that nurses perceived in the management of cancer pain and have agreement with previous studies that nurse's related barriers exist and produce difficulty in pain management. Among nurse's related barriers, inadequate training to nurses for pain management, inadequate time for pain assessment, inadequate time for health teaching and non-pharmacological interventions were found most agreed barrier that put stress on the call for training of nurses on pain management [11][12][13][14][15] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The importance of pharmacist-patient communication is obvious, as is the importance of pharmacist communication with physicians and nurses. Many nurses believe that the most delayed process in CPM is contacting the physicians [15], the clinical pharmacist can be the bridge between the physician and the nurse. The clinical pharmacist gets detailed information about the patient's pain through the supervising nurse, further assessment and pharmacologic monitoring through pharmacy rounds, and nally with the communication between the supervising physician to discuss medication regimens and monitoring details.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%