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Opinions
on Pain Management and Palliative Care: Comparison between HIV Specialists
and Oncologists
Despite
the introduction of HAART, pain is still a common symptom in people
living with HIV/AIDS. For these persons, pain management supplied
by palliative care teams may support standard HIV care.
This
study compares opinions toward palliative care of 83 HIV specialists
and 217 oncologists (French national survey: Palliative Care
2002).
Data
were collected by phone questionnaire.
A
cluster analysis was carried out in order to identify contrasted
profiles of opinions toward palliative care.
A
logistic regression was performed to test the relationships between
identified clusters and physicians' characteristics.
With
a two-cluster partition, the investigators observed a profile corresponding
to a restrictive conception of palliative care.
Within
this profile, physicians were more prone to consider that palliative
care should be used only for terminally-ill patients, and only after
all curative treatments have failed, with a restrained prescriptive
power for physicians providing palliative care.
This
conception was associated with reluctance toward morphine analgesia.
Once controlled for other physicians' characteristics, HIV specialists
were more likely than oncologists to endorse this restrictive conception.
Thus
French HIV specialists should be more informed about the utility
of providing palliative care, even for patients who are not in terminal
stage.
07/02/04
Reference
P
Peretti-Watel and others. Opinions toward pain management and palliative care:
comparison between HIV specialists and oncologists. AIDS Care
16(5): 619-627. July 2004.
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