Chronic Pain in Cancer Survivors
Sun V, Borneman T, Piper B, Koczywas M, Ferrell B. Barriers to pain assessment and management in cancer survivorship. J Cancer Surviv. 2008 Mar;2(1):65-71. Epub 2008 Feb 15. PMID: 18648988
In just one example of their review of pain and cancer survivorship, about half of mastectomy patients suffer chronic pain, according to researchers at City of Hope and Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center. The authors discuss three representative cases, drawn from a National Cancer Institute-funded study.
From the abstract:
"Across all three case presentations, barriers such as fear of side effects from pain medications, fear of addiction, lack of professional knowledge of the basic principles of pain management, and lack of timely access to pain medications due to reimbursement issues are prevalent in cancer survivorship.."
The article includes a brief list of resources in chronic pain, and an even more useful list of references.
OncologyWatch: Posts about free-access articles on aspects of oncology theory, practice and policy (about the blogger). This blog is not a source for medical advice.
Technorati tags:
oncology open access cancer survivorship chronic pain management
Comments and Links Welcome!

I have had arthritis since 20 years of age, but in the last two years it has become a major.The arthritis is creeping into all my joints and I am having trouble functioning. The only relief I recently started taking was Lyprinol which I stumbled across on “kiwi drug” about 3 weeks ago. I am now today feeling better then ever! Really helps me cope with the pain
Comment by Samuel — October 20, 2009 @ 8:00 pm