Prehabilitation: The underutilised weapon for chronic pain management.

IF 1.3 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY British Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-29 DOI:10.1177/20494637241250239
Lydia V Tidmarsh, Richard Harrison, Katherine A Finlay
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Abstract

Objective: Prehabilitation encompasses preparatory clinical intervention(s) delivered during the period between diagnosis and treatment commencement. Despite widespread successful usage preoperatively, psychological prehabilitation is neglected in outpatient chronic pain management. Although pain management waitlists are associated with treatment attrition and psychological and physical decline, this time window is underutilised in preventing escalation. Waitlists present an under-explored opportunity to 'prehabilitate' patients waiting for treatment. This topical review aimed to: (1) examine the effectiveness of psychological prehabilitation for pain services; (2) evaluate the psychological and physical decline associated with waiting for pain management; (3) highlight key psychological prehabilitative targets for increasing treatment engagement; (4) promote pain management psychological prehabilitation within personalised pain medicine, building recommendations for future interventions.

Methods: Studies regarding the impact of waitlists and prehabilitation for chronic pain were reviewed.

Results: Findings demonstrated that the psychological constructs of patient expectations, health locus of control, self-efficacy and pain catastrophizing dynamically influence attrition, treatment engagement and outcomes while waiting. These constructs are amenable to change, emphasising their potential utility within a targeted waitlist intervention.

Conclusions: Prehabilitating chronic pain patients towards treatment engagement could circumvent cycles of failed treatment seeking, preventing psychological and physical decline, and reducing healthcare utilisation. Utilising the waitlist to identify psychosocial risk factors (external health locus of control, low self-efficacy and high pain catastrophizing) would identify who requires additional support to prevent increased risk of treatment failure, enhancing personalised care before prescribed treatment is accessed. This review cements the urgent need for pain services to engage proactively with prehabilitation innovation.

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预康复:未被充分利用的慢性疼痛治疗武器。
目的:术前康复包括从诊断到开始治疗期间的准备性临床干预。尽管术前心理康复治疗被广泛应用,但在门诊慢性疼痛治疗中却被忽视。尽管疼痛治疗等待名单与治疗流失、心理和生理衰退有关,但这一时间窗口在防止治疗升级方面却未得到充分利用。候诊名单为等待治疗的患者提供了 "预康复 "的机会。本专题综述旨在(1)研究疼痛服务心理康复的有效性;(2)评估与等待疼痛治疗相关的心理和生理衰退;(3)强调提高治疗参与度的关键心理康复目标;(4)在个性化疼痛医学中促进疼痛治疗心理康复,为未来的干预措施提供建议:方法:回顾了有关慢性疼痛等待名单和预康复的影响的研究:研究结果表明,患者期望、健康控制点、自我效能感和疼痛灾难化等心理结构动态地影响着等待期间的流失、治疗参与度和治疗结果。这些心理结构易于改变,强调了它们在有针对性的候诊干预中的潜在作用:对慢性疼痛患者进行参与治疗前的康复训练,可以避免寻求治疗失败的循环,防止心理和生理衰退,减少医疗保健的使用。利用候诊清单来识别心理社会风险因素(外部健康控制定位、低自我效能感和高疼痛灾难化),可以确定哪些患者需要额外支持以防止治疗失败风险的增加,从而在接受处方治疗前加强个性化护理。本综述强调了疼痛服务部门主动参与康复前创新的迫切需要。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Pain
British Journal of Pain CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: British Journal of Pain is a peer-reviewed quarterly British journal with an international multidisciplinary Editorial Board. The journal publishes original research and reviews on all major aspects of pain and pain management. Reviews reflect the body of evidence of the topic and are suitable for a multidisciplinary readership. Where empirical evidence is lacking, the reviews reflect the generally held opinions of experts in the field. The Journal has broadened its scope and has become a forum for publishing primary research together with brief reports related to pain and pain interventions. Submissions from all over the world have been published and are welcome. Official journal of the British Pain Society.
期刊最新文献
What influences post-operative opioid requirements for tibial fractures? Botulinum toxin: Should we reconsider its place in the treatment of neuropathic pain? Experience of compassion-based practice in mindfulness for health for individuals with persistent pain. Prehabilitation: The underutilised weapon for chronic pain management. The interaction between psychological factors and conditioned pain modulation.
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