Cancer Pain ManagementDeborah B. McGuire, Connie Henke Yarbro Grune & Stratton, 1987 - 286 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 107
... assessment should be longitudinal as well . This author and colleagues recently studied 465 randomly selected medical - surgical inpatients to determine the incidence and characteristics of pain in hospitalized patients and to explore ...
... assessment should be longitudinal as well . This author and colleagues recently studied 465 randomly selected medical - surgical inpatients to determine the incidence and characteristics of pain in hospitalized patients and to explore ...
Page 121
... assessment is control of the pain with assessment as the means of accomplishing that goal . An ideal tool for clinical assessment would provide information about the eight dimensions described above to guide the selection of appropriate ...
... assessment is control of the pain with assessment as the means of accomplishing that goal . An ideal tool for clinical assessment would provide information about the eight dimensions described above to guide the selection of appropriate ...
Page 148
... assessment of pain . Iss Compr Ped Nurs 5 : 337-349 , 1981 2. Ahles TA , Blanchard EB , Ruckdeschel JC : The multidimensional nature of cancer related pain . Pain 17 : 277-288 , 1983 3. Ahles TA , Ruckdeschel JC , Blanchard EB : Cancer ...
... assessment of pain . Iss Compr Ped Nurs 5 : 337-349 , 1981 2. Ahles TA , Blanchard EB , Ruckdeschel JC : The multidimensional nature of cancer related pain . Pain 17 : 277-288 , 1983 3. Ahles TA , Ruckdeschel JC , Blanchard EB : Cancer ...
Contents
Prevalence and Profile of Pain | 21 |
Painful Complications of Cancer Diagnosis | 47 |
Issues in Cancer Pain Management | 69 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieved activity acute addition administration agents analgesia analgesic anxiety approach appropriate aspects aspirin assessment associated attitudes behavioral cancer pain cancer patients cancer-related pain cause changes chronic pain Clin clinical compared complete component considered continuous dependence depression described developed direct discussed disease dose drugs effects evaluation example experience experienced factors frequently function given important increased indicated individual infusion initial intensity interventions involved knowledge less major measures medication methods morphine narcotic narcotic analgesics nerve nurses observed occur oncology oral pain control pain management pain relief pain syndromes percent possible postoperative potential present problem procedures produce progressive psychological radiation received recent relatively relaxation reported respiratory response result scale scores sensory severe side effects significant specific symptoms Table techniques terminal therapy tolerance treated treatment tumor usually York