reviewCurrent Medical Research and OpinionNov 15, 2013GREEN OA

Incidence, patient satisfaction, and perceptions of post-surgical pain: results from a US national survey

Duke Medical Center · University of Chicago

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

During the past two decades, professional associations, accrediting bodies, and payors have made post-surgical pain treatment a high priority. In light of the disappointing findings in previous surveys, a survey was conducted to assess patient perceptions and characterize patient experiences/levels of satisfaction with post-surgical pain management. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Survey included a random sample of US adults who had undergone surgery within 5 years from the survey date. Participants were asked about their concerns before surgery, severity of perioperative pain, pain treatments, perceptions about post-surgical pain and pain medications, and satisfaction with treatments they received.

Results

Of the 300 participants, ∼86% experienced pain after surgery; of these, 75% had moderate/extreme pain during the immediate post-surgical period, with 74% still experiencing these levels of pain after discharge. Post-surgical pain was the most prominent pre-surgical patient concern, and nearly half reported they had high/very high anxiety levels about pain before surgery. Approximately 88% received analgesic medications to manage pain; of these, 80% experienced adverse effects and 39% reported moderate/severe pain even after receiving their first dose. STUDY LIMITATIONS: Key study limitations include the relatively small population size, potential for recall bias associated with the 14-month average time delay from surgery date to survey date, and the inability to account for influences of type of surgery and intraoperative anesthetic/analgesic use on survey results.

Citation impact

862
total citations
FWCI
20.88
Percentile
100%
References
12
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Anxiety
  • Analgesic
  • Perioperative
  • Physical therapy
  • Patient satisfaction
  • Population
  • Incidence (geometry)
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