Apps for Older People’s Pain Self-Management: Perspectives of Primary Care and Allied Health Clinicians

Author:

Bhattarai Priyanka1,Newton-John Toby2,Phillips Jane L3

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing, University of Notre Dame Australia, Sydney, NSW, Australia

2. Graduate School of Health, Sydney, NSW, Australia

3. Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background Chronic arthritic pain is one of the major causes of physical suffering and disability among older people. Primary care and allied health clinicians use various approaches to help their older clients better manage their arthritic pain. The growing uptake of technology among older people offers the potential for clinicians to integrate an arthritic pain app into their patients’ self-management plans. This study explored the perspectives of Australian primary care and allied health clinicians regarding the use of pain self-management apps to help their older patients/clients better manage their arthritic pain. Methods Qualitative design using a semistructured interview approach. Interviews were conducted via telephone with primary and allied health clinicians (N = 17) across Australia. Results The overarching theme underlying participants’ views on integration of apps into older people’s pain self-management strategy was that this approach is an idealistic but uniquely challenging endeavor. Four subthemes emerged, namely: 1) self-management apps are a potentially useful tool but require careful consideration; 2) clinicians’ involvement is crucial yet potentially onerous; 3) no single app is right for every older person with arthritic pain; and 4) patient data access is beneficial, but caution is needed for real-time data access. Discussion The predominant clinician perspective of integrating apps into their older patients/clients’ pain self-management strategies was that this approach is an idealistic but uniquely challenging endeavor. Apps were seen as having potential to support various aspects of patients’ self-management behaviors; however, there were notable concerns with regards to the challenges inherent in this approach for both clinicians and older users (patients/clients).

Funder

The University of Notre Dame Australia Ethics Committee

University of Notre Dame Australia's Collaborative Research Network

Australian Government

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Clinical Neurology,General Medicine

Reference51 articles.

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