In pain management are you afraid to give comfort to your patients with appropriate medications? Are you afraid to be comforted when in pain? Have you encountered families or care partners, who are afraid to comfort their loved one in pain by giving pain medications?
In a classic 2002 qualitative study, “Fearing to Comfort,” Zerwekh, Riddell, & Richard identified that RNs, physicians, patients, families, and health systems were afraid to relieve pain with appropriate use of pain medications. They were Not doing evidence-based practice, but fear-based practice. 
Fear barriers include, but are not limited to 1) patients’ fear of addiction, fear of distracting the MD from the main treatment plan, and loss of control; 2) MDs’ avoiding the needs of the dying, fear of rewarding drug-seekers, or equating pain management with euthanasia; 3) RNs’ avoiding pain, failing to switch to palliative goals at end of life, and fear of killing the patient; 4) families’ fears of addiction, side effects, & killing their loved one; and 5) health facilities’ not giving unique consideration to those at end of life, inadequate staffing, & time constraints (Zerwekh et al., 2002).
This is an issue because irrational problems cannot be simply solved by giving rational
information. We have to find evidence-based practices that can create a change of heart, if you will. As Zerwekh et al wrote: “Because fear is so influential in decisions to keep pain under control, palliative educational approaches must go beyond providing information to fill deficits in palliative knowledge.”
We must learn evidence-based ways to overcome fear and control pain. Why? Because pain interferes with living life. Who are we protecting when we fear appropriate pain medications? Not the patient.
Remedy? Palliative care education must confront the fears and remove them through cognitive restructuring that includes learning to question beliefs about addiction etc. Role playing, role modeling, and an expert walking through this with the provider or family who is afraid. Beyond this helping people to recognize their own fears of pain & death, and providing the very best available information on pain management (Zerwekh et al).
CRITICAL THINKING: Have you been afraid? Or seen others afraid? How can you solve this problem using evidence-based practice that = BEST available evidence + Clinical judgment + Patient/family preferences & values? Be specific because if you haven’t yet encountered the problem of fearing to comfort, be assured that you will.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Read full text Zerwekh et al (2002) online. It could change your life & the life of those for whom you care!!
practice pain assessment & management safely. We know
that asking patients about suicidal intent does not cause them to commit suicide. Does asking patients about pain cause them to have it or to treat pain they don’t have? Hmmm…..
Myth #5: The Joint Commission pain standards caused a sharp rise in opioid prescriptions. This claim is completely contradicted by data from the
suggest that we might need new studies. I hope only that we won’t jump on the fear bandwagon. Keep practice EVIDENCE BASED, listen to patient/carepartner preferences & values, & use your judgment.
Google–not to mention yahoo, bing & other web search engines–are mere popularity contests of literature. Google Scholar is a step up, but it is still a search engine. It can miss important articles entirely.
For more info: Look for that

numbers. Another problem will occur if the reliability and validity of the self-report questionnaire is not established. (Reliability is consistency in measurement and validity is the accuracy of measuring what it purports to measure.) Additionally, self-reports typically provide only a)ordinal level data, such as on a 1-to-5 scale, b) nominal data, such as on a yes/no scale, or c) qualitative descriptions in words without categories or numbers. (Ordinal data=scores are in order with some numbers higher than others, and nominal data = categories. Statistical calculations are limited for both and not possible for qualitative data unless the researcher counts themes or words that recur.)
An example of a self-report measure that we regard as a gold standard for clinical and research data = 0-10 pain scale score. An example of a self-report measure that might be useful but less preferred is a self-assessment of knowledge (e.g., How strong on a 1-5 scale is your knowledge of arterial blood gas interpretation?) The use of it for knowledge can be okay as long as everyone understands that it is perceived level of knowledge.
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perimental drug X will have better cardiac function than will heart failure patients who receive standard drug Y.” You can see that the researcher is manipulating the drug (independent variable) that patients will receive. And patient cardiac outcomes are expected to vary—in fact cardiac function is expected to be better—for patients who receive the experimental drug X.
1st – Identify the population in the hypothesis—the population does not vary (& so, it is not a variable). 2nd – Identify the independent variable–This will be the one that is the cause & it will vary. 3rd – Identify the dependent variable–This will be the one that is the outcome & its variation depends on changes/variation in the independent variable.






On the experimental unit RNs stated the script to patients exactly as written and on room whiteboards posted the script, last pain med & pain scores. Posters of the script were also posted on the unit. In contrast, on the control unit RN communication and use of whiteboard were dependent on individual preferences. Researchers measured effectiveness of the script by collecting HCAHPS scores 2 times before RNs began using the script (a baseline pretest) and then 5 times during and after RNs began using it (a posttest) on both units.
Critical thinking? What would prevent you from adopting or adapting this script in your own personal practice tomorrow? What are the barriers and facilitators to getting other RNs on your unit to adopt this script, including using whiteboards? Are there any risks to using the script? What are the risks to NOT using the script?

Critical thinking: How would you apply
