4.4 Article

A Preliminary Study of Provider Burden in the Treatment of Chronic Pain: Perspectives of Physicians and People with Chronic Pain

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 22, Issue 11, Pages 1408-1417

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2021.04.009

Keywords

Chronic pain; provider burden; clinical judgment

Funding

  1. Saint Louis University

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This study compared perceptions of the burden of patient care and associated clinical judgments between physicians and people with chronic pain (PWCP), revealing that physicians had higher burden ratings and less favorable clinical judgments, while PWCP respondents had lower burden ratings and more favorable clinical judgments. These differences could impact treatment collaboration and merit further study in clinical practice.
This study compared perceptions of the burden of patient care and associated clinical judgments between physicians and people with chronic pain (PWCP) in a 2 x 3 x 2 between-subjects design that varied participant type, patient-reported pain severity (4/6-8/10), and supporting medical evidence (low/high). One hundred and nine physicians and 476 American Chronic Pain Association members were randomly assigned to 1 of 6 conditions. Respondents estimated the clinical burden they would assume as the treating physician of a hypothetical patient with chronic low back pain, and made clinical judgments regarding that patient. Physician burden ratings were significantly higher than PWCP ratings, and clinical impressions (eg, trust in pain report, medical attribution) and management concerns (eg, opioid abuse risk) were relatively less favorable. Neither pain severity nor medical evidence affected burden ratings significantly. High medical evidence was associated with more favorable clinical impressions; higher pain severity led to more discounting of patient pain reports. Burden was significantly correlated with a range of clinical judgments. Results indicate that physicians and PWCP differ in their perceptions of provider burden and related clinical judgments in ways that could impact treatment collaboration. Further research is needed that examines provider burden in actual clinical practice. Perspective: Physicians and people with chronic pain (PWCP) estimated the clinical burden of patient care and made judgments about a hypothetical patient with chronic pain. Physician burden ratings were higher and clinical judgments less favorable, relative to PWCP respondents. These differences could impact treatment collaboration and merit study in clinical practice. (C) 2021 by United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc.

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