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P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain

INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Pain is a predominant symptom that young people often present with in paediatric rheumatology clinics. There are several challenges with respect to pain communication between young people and healthcare professionals (Lee RR 2020). At a virtual Your Rheum meeting, (Your Rheu...

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Autores principales: Holt, Tilda Kierkegaard, Baz, Zahra, Gnanenthiran, Suruthi, Rebecca, Lee R, Laura, Lunt E, Janet, McDonagh E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9515818/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkac067.004
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author Holt, Tilda Kierkegaard
Baz, Zahra
Gnanenthiran, Suruthi
Rebecca, Lee R
Laura, Lunt E
Janet, McDonagh E
author_facet Holt, Tilda Kierkegaard
Baz, Zahra
Gnanenthiran, Suruthi
Rebecca, Lee R
Laura, Lunt E
Janet, McDonagh E
author_sort Holt, Tilda Kierkegaard
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Pain is a predominant symptom that young people often present with in paediatric rheumatology clinics. There are several challenges with respect to pain communication between young people and healthcare professionals (Lee RR 2020). At a virtual Your Rheum meeting, (Your Rheum is a national young person’s advisory group in rheumatology), a word cloud was developed as part of the discussion to start conversations around the development of a future pain research project. Afterwards, the young people suggested the word cloud would potentially be useful to start discussions about pain in clinic. DESCRIPTION/METHOD AIM: to determine acceptability of using a word cloud as a communication tool to prompt discussions with young people aged 11-24 years about pain in clinic. Healthcare professionals in the Barbara Ansell National Network for Adolescent Rheumatology BANNAR network were asked by Your Rheum to give out the word cloud form to consecutive young people with pain in their clinic. The following data was collected: words in the current word cloud (consisting of 35 words) which described their pain, additional words to add to the word cloud, perception regarding the usefulness of a word cloud to aid conversations about pain, using a four-point scale ranging from ‘not at all’ – ‘yes a lot’. The age and gender of each young person was also collected. The information gathered was then collated by Your Rheum members. DISCUSSION/RESULTS: Of 33 young people who completed the forms, 26 were female and the mean age was 15 years, range 9-22 years. Young people selected a mean of 13/35 words from the word cloud, range 2-27 (table 1). Of the 33 young people, 14 suggested additional words (median of 2, range 1-24). Table 2 highlights additional words that could be added to the word cloud. When asked if a word cloud would help young people talk to health professionals about their pain in clinic, the majority said it yes it would (19=yes-a lot, 8=yes-a little, 5=possibly, 0=not at all 1=missing data). KEY LEARNING POINTS/CONCLUSION: The word cloud was acceptable to the participants in this study and demonstrated potential as a communication prompt from the young person’s perspective. Research is needed to determine what impact it has on pain communication between the young person and healthcare professional in the actual clinic visit.
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spelling pubmed-95158182022-09-28 P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain Holt, Tilda Kierkegaard Baz, Zahra Gnanenthiran, Suruthi Rebecca, Lee R Laura, Lunt E Janet, McDonagh E Rheumatol Adv Pract Posters INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Pain is a predominant symptom that young people often present with in paediatric rheumatology clinics. There are several challenges with respect to pain communication between young people and healthcare professionals (Lee RR 2020). At a virtual Your Rheum meeting, (Your Rheum is a national young person’s advisory group in rheumatology), a word cloud was developed as part of the discussion to start conversations around the development of a future pain research project. Afterwards, the young people suggested the word cloud would potentially be useful to start discussions about pain in clinic. DESCRIPTION/METHOD AIM: to determine acceptability of using a word cloud as a communication tool to prompt discussions with young people aged 11-24 years about pain in clinic. Healthcare professionals in the Barbara Ansell National Network for Adolescent Rheumatology BANNAR network were asked by Your Rheum to give out the word cloud form to consecutive young people with pain in their clinic. The following data was collected: words in the current word cloud (consisting of 35 words) which described their pain, additional words to add to the word cloud, perception regarding the usefulness of a word cloud to aid conversations about pain, using a four-point scale ranging from ‘not at all’ – ‘yes a lot’. The age and gender of each young person was also collected. The information gathered was then collated by Your Rheum members. DISCUSSION/RESULTS: Of 33 young people who completed the forms, 26 were female and the mean age was 15 years, range 9-22 years. Young people selected a mean of 13/35 words from the word cloud, range 2-27 (table 1). Of the 33 young people, 14 suggested additional words (median of 2, range 1-24). Table 2 highlights additional words that could be added to the word cloud. When asked if a word cloud would help young people talk to health professionals about their pain in clinic, the majority said it yes it would (19=yes-a lot, 8=yes-a little, 5=possibly, 0=not at all 1=missing data). KEY LEARNING POINTS/CONCLUSION: The word cloud was acceptable to the participants in this study and demonstrated potential as a communication prompt from the young person’s perspective. Research is needed to determine what impact it has on pain communication between the young person and healthcare professional in the actual clinic visit. Oxford University Press 2022-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9515818/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkac067.004 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Posters
Holt, Tilda Kierkegaard
Baz, Zahra
Gnanenthiran, Suruthi
Rebecca, Lee R
Laura, Lunt E
Janet, McDonagh E
P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
title P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
title_full P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
title_fullStr P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
title_full_unstemmed P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
title_short P04 The pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
title_sort p04 the pain word cloud project: development of a clinic prompt to support young people in conversations about pain
topic Posters
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9515818/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkac067.004
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