Patient experiences of remote care in a pain service during a pandemic

Author:

Willcocks Cathy1,Joy Deborah LA1ORCID,Seward Joseph2,Mills Samantha2,Heywood Mark2,Price Cathy1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pain Clinic, Solent NHS Trust, Southampton, UK

2. University of Southampton Faculty of Medicine, Southampton, UK

Abstract

Background In March 2020, Pain Management Services were obliged to cease face-to-face consultations. This abrupt change, in line with recommendations from the British Pain Society, aimed to protect patients and staff and allowed resource re-allocation. Pain services were obliged to switch to remote consultations using Video Tele-Conferencing Technology (VTC) and Remote Consultations (RC) either through telephone or video calls using a variety of media and software applications. Little is known about the patient experience of remotely delivered pain care especially when alternatives are removed. The aim of this work was to understand the patient experience of this necessary switch regarding pain self-management interventions during the initial stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods A mixed-methods evaluation of the patient experience from three pain self-management interventions, taking place in a large community-based pain rehabilitation service along the South Coast of England, was performed. Experience-Based Design (EBD) methods were used to map patient experience at touch points through two interventions that were delivered in a structured format. Semi-structured recorded interviews were transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis for the third. Findings Fifty-eight patients took part covering the scope of the service. In general, educational and psychological sessions were well received, with physical rehabilitation components being less easy to convey remotely. Attrition rates were high for the pain management programme. Group pain education worked particularly well in an online format with hope being the predominant emotion experienced. Clear limitations were technical failures and the lack of ability to form relationships in a virtual world. Conclusions Remote digitalised interventions were acceptable to most patients. Attention should be paid to access and improving social aspects of delivery when considering such interventions. Physiotherapy may require more face-to-face necessitating a hybrid model and needs further investigation. EBD proved a highly suitable approach.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference38 articles.

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3. International Association for the Study of Pain. Task force on wait-times summary and recommendations, https://www.iasp-pain.org/resources/guidelines/ (accessed 19th June 2022).

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