Perception of Pain Expression Among Surgical Patients and Families from Three Ethnic Groups of a Nation: A Multicenter Qualitative Study

被引:1
|
作者
Hanago, Getu Ataro [1 ]
Siebeck, Matthias [2 ]
Dira, Samuel Jilo [3 ]
Tadesse, Tefera [4 ]
Irnich, Dominik [5 ]
机构
[1] Hawassa Univ, Dept Anesthesia, Hawassa, Ethiopia
[2] Ludwig Maximilians Univ Munchen, LMU Univ Hosp, Inst Med Educ, Munich, Germany
[3] Hawassa Univ, Dept Anthropol, Hawassa, Ethiopia
[4] Addis Ababa Univ, Inst Educ Res, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
[5] LMU Univ Hosp LMU Munich, Multidiciplinary Pain Ctr, Dept Anesthesiol, Munich, Germany
来源
JOURNAL OF PAIN RESEARCH | 2024年 / 17卷
关键词
surgical pain; pain and culture; pain expression; pain behavior; pain response; stoic response; SEX-DIFFERENCES;
D O I
10.2147/JPR.S447676
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Despite its universal nature; perception, coping, responses, treatment options, and overall experiences of pain are influenced by biopsychosocial factors to various extents. Pain perception, expression, and control are progressively learned behaviors among members of a society and are culture-specific. Effects of ethnicity-related culture (ethnoculture) on pain experience in a broader context have increasingly been reported. However, evidence from ethnoculturally diverse groups of a nation, particularly based on surgical patients, is limited. Therefore, as a qualitative research effort of a broader project aimed at assessing ethnocultural determinants of surgical pain management, this study explored the perception of ethnoculturally diverse patients and families about expressing surgical disease-related pain.Methods: This study follows subjectivist-interpretivist philosophical assumptions as an underpinning research paradigm. We purposively selected 11 patients for in-depth interviews and 12 patients' family members for focus group discussions in three hospitals of ethnic-based regions of Ethiopia. In the phenomenological frame, thematic analysis was employed.Finding: Ethnocultural background influences how individuals express and respond to pain according to emergent themes of finding- Pain and overlooked cultural influence, Pain expressiveness in cultural context, Stereotypes of pain expressiveness, and Bravehood through stoic response. Pain feelings are commonly hidden where the domestic culture values stoic response to pain compared to ethnoculture where pain expressiveness is encouraged.Conclusion: Individuals can express and respond to pain differently due to ethnocultural diversity within a nation. Researchers and clinicians should consider cultural context while applying the prevailing one-size-fits-all pain assessment tools among surgical patients of a nation with ethnocultural diversity.
引用
收藏
页码:241 / 251
页数:11
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