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"Failure to Assess Patients' and Families' Concerns About Pain Management Can Interfere With Appropriate Opioid Use: Presented at AAHPM" By Bonnie Darves SALT LAKE CITY, UT -- February 26, 2007 -- Patients in hospice or palliative care sometimes are reluctant to accurately describe their pain to doctors and nurses, or to speak openly in the presence of family members, which may set in motion a chain of events whose net result is inadequate pain management. Opening the lines of communication, while difficult at times, may be key to turning poor pain management into an effective solution and avoiding common misconceptions about opioid use. Denice Economou, MN, CNS, AOCN, oncology nurse specialist and senior research specialist, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, California, discussed the use of opioids in pain management in a presentation here on February 17[th. Her presentation on February 17th at the annual assembly of the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM), outlined several strategies that can improve patient care by improving communication among all parties involved in end-of-life care. |
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