Institute of Applied Health Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Department of Anaesthetics, NHS Grampian, Aberdeen, UK.
Eur J Pain. 2023 Oct;27(9):1139-1143. doi: 10.1002/ejp.2166. Epub 2023 Aug 11.
What 'acceptable pain' means may be different for everyone and dependent on the moment and the context. In this text, we explore the concepts of pain acceptability and acceptance. We explain why we need to better explore (un)acceptable pain, to eventually facilitate pain assessment and management.
Using different approaches and perspectives (with examples and application from multiple disciplines, i.e. orthopaedics, psychology, pharmacological therapy), we discussed anecdotal examples and included a systematic, scoping and literature review.
We rejected the idea that in the context of chronic pain, acceptability, disability and manageability overlap neatly. Additionally, we rejected the validity of pain intensity rating scales to sufficiently explore individuals' experience of pain. In the one study that met our criteria, a definition of 'acceptable pain' was dropped as participants deemed it inappropriate because it did not address the significant challenges associated with pain. This is important, however, because the acceptability of pain may precede, follow and/or inform the 'pain acceptance' process, which is an important concept associated with better outcomes.
Very little is known regarding what 'acceptable pain' may mean to people living with pain. Qualitative studies may improve our understanding of individuals' perceptions, perspectives and expectations as we do not know, for the moment, what 'acceptable pain' may mean to a particular person and, potentially, regarding a specific treatment or other contextual aspects that are not captured with currently used scores and quantitative measures.
What does 'acceptable pain' mean may differ between people with painful experiences and may depend on contextual factors. Pain acceptability may be distinct from manageability, and may precede, follow and/or inform the 'pain acceptance' process. This text, rigorously based on a review of the existing literature, defends the idea that acceptable pain should be better studied.
“可接受的疼痛”对每个人来说可能都不一样,取决于当下的时刻和环境。在本文中,我们探讨了疼痛可接受性和接受的概念。我们解释了为什么我们需要更好地探索(不可接受的)疼痛,以便最终促进疼痛评估和管理。
使用不同的方法和视角(包括来自多个学科的例子和应用,如矫形、心理学、药物治疗),我们讨论了轶事例子,并进行了系统的、范围的和文献综述。
我们拒绝了这样一种观点,即在慢性疼痛的背景下,可接受性、残疾和可管理性之间存在明显的重叠。此外,我们还拒绝了疼痛强度评分量表足以充分探索个体疼痛体验的有效性。在一项符合我们标准的研究中,“可接受的疼痛”的定义被放弃了,因为参与者认为它不合适,因为它没有解决与疼痛相关的重大挑战。然而,这一点很重要,因为疼痛的可接受性可能先于、后于或告知“疼痛接受”过程,这是一个与更好的结果相关的重要概念。
对于患有疼痛的人来说,“可接受的疼痛”可能意味着什么,我们知之甚少。定性研究可能会提高我们对个体感知、观点和期望的理解,因为我们目前还不知道“可接受的疼痛”对特定个体意味着什么,以及可能对特定治疗或其他当前使用的评分和定量测量无法捕捉到的特定上下文因素意味着什么。
有疼痛经历的人之间,“可接受的疼痛”可能不同,并且可能取决于环境因素。疼痛可接受性可能与可管理性不同,并且可能先于、后于或告知“疼痛接受”过程。本文基于对现有文献的严格审查,捍卫了更好地研究可接受疼痛的观点。