In the article, “Sometimes Pain Is a Puzzle That Can’t Be Solved”, Abigail Zuger, the author, describes her own experiences with pain along with some examples and generalizations about the feeling. She claims that she is “ruled by (her) elbow” and “it is (her) constant companion, whimpering, and tugging at (her) sleeve.” She goes on to say that many people have the same problems, especially when drugs, “like naproxen and ibuprofen” are unhelpful and “might as well be cornflakes.” Finally, she explains how far we have advanced in the medical field, but “ none of (the) knowledge has translated into new treatments,” to help people such as herself.
I am so happy you picked pain as your ICP project. Pain, in my eyes, has always been all encompassing. It can affect sleep, ability to move around, eating, healing, breathing, mood and relationships (Shega, Tiedt, Grant, & Dale, 2014). Personally when I am in severe pain I really do not want people around and it affects every aspect of my life. To think that persistent pain affects 80% of elderly residents in nursing homes and 50% of community dwellers, and we still do not treat this properly (Veal& Peterson, 2015).
Some patients prefer not to take pain medication because they fear addiction or may have a history of substance abuse. Educating the patients on their right to be free of pain and having their pain managed aggressively is a priority in the recovery phase. The goals that I hope to achieve during this clinical practicum
Among those individuals who took to American culture, the rates of insurance and having access to care is much higher than those who strictly maintained their Latino culture.1 Preventative medicine and utilization of the healthcare network due to lack of fear regarding barriers to health are all positive outcomes, once full acculturation is assessed. Better self-perception of health is another positive influence that is found through exposure to healthcare as well as
Despite improvements, racial minorities and people that suffer disabilities often face more health care disparities that lead to health inequalities including forced sterilization and an increase in cervical cancer. For instance, the American Indian/Alaska Native population is a prominent minority community that faces health disparities. In the United States, there is currently 567 federally recognized American Indian/Alaska Native tribes and 2.9 million individuals identify themselves as American Indian/Alaska Native natives alone (Dugi, 2017). These individuals continue to die faster than other Americans in many categories that can be attributed with the health disparities this population endures (Dugi, 2017). American Indians/ Alaska Natives
Eula Biss, in her essay “The Pain Scale”, maintains her confusion over the pain scale concept starting from the very first number of the scale and its relevance to the pain itself. She also claims that pain is rather multidimensional process, which I believe is true, and the pain scale cannot provide the base to fully understand the process, thus, I assume, useless. The author in her essay often mentions her father who is a physician and has a lot of experience working with patients. As a doctor he knows how to define and deal with patients `s pain. “Most pain is minor” is one of his statements that disturbed the author and provoked her to create a larger list of pain types.
Research draft paper Amid American communities all over the country there is a hidden population of individuals who are particularly susceptible to the damaging effects of the inaccessibility of quality health care. An estimated 11 million people, Latino individuals and families who have entered the United States without documentation, live their lives under an inordinate amount of stress and fear (Sorrell). Undocumented Latino immigrants in the US are especially vulnerable when it comes to their health due to the various barriers and disparities they encounter such as a complicated healthcare system, inaccessible care, language barriers, cultural differences, perceptions of discrimination, and fear of deportation.
According to Potochnick & Perreira (2010) there is higher likelihood of anxiety and depression on Hispanic/Latinos when immigration and psychosocial worries are present. With the large majority of foreign-born population in the U.S. originating from Mexican land [I], this is an important matter to consider. 2. Lack of medical care may not be the ultimate factor in the low number of treatment for depressive disorders in this culture, a social-cultural script may also be of substantial significance in this matter. C.
Trauma, anxiety, and depression have been brought on by the pandemic's rise in hate crimes committed against Asian Americans. The Asian American Psychological Association claims that racism and discrimination have caused Asian Americans to turn to unhealthy coping strategies like drug abuse and self-harm. Lack of resources for mental health that are sensitive to cultural differences is another problem Asian Americans experience. Asian Americans have trouble getting access to quality care due to a lack of funding, which declinesan their mental health issues. To add on, because there aren't enough Asian Americans working in the field of mental health, Asian Americans might not have
In this article, researchers suggest minority in population remain at higher risk and danger for diabetes than the social majority. According to National Information Center on Health Services Research and Health Care Technology (NICHSR, 2016), Healthcare disparities denote variations in access or availability of health amenities and services. Health status disparities denote to the difference in proportions of disease incidence and incapacities among socioeconomic and/or geographically defined population groups. Structural violence is unique means of labeling social measures that place people and populaces in harmful condition. It is structural in as much it is surrounded in the political and economic society of our social domain; it is
According to the CDC Hispanics of Mexican origin make up approximately 17 percent of the population in the United States. They are the one of the largest cultural populations in U.S. has risen dramatically over last four decades. There are a variety of reason that lead to health disparities for the Hispanic community these reasons then lead to the individuals not obtaining healthcare. First, it was reported by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in 2012 that 29.1 percent of the Hispanic do not have health insurance. This usually prevents the majority of Hispanic people from receiving health care.
CHAPTER 2 THE RESEARCH QUESTIONS 2.1 Review of the Literature Pain Pain is subjective unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage (Merskey & Bogduk, 1994) while Young (2005) suggests that individuals learn pain from their experiences. Craig’s Social Communication Model of Pain (2009), individuals have numerous elements that interact and create their own perception of pain such as biological, psychological and social factors. In the hospital settings, children often experience unpredictable and severe procedure-related pain that may accompany negative emotional and psychological effects (Cummings, Reid, Finley, McGrath, & Ritchie, 1996; Kazak &Kunin-Batson, 2001)McMurtry (2013) stated that needle pain in children is common.
Psychological Assessment and Management of Chronic pain Evaluating a chronic pain condition from a biological perspective is limiting, and often fails to fully explain the patient’s symptoms. In contrast to the biomedical model, which explains pain purely in terms of pathophysiology, the biopsychosocial model views pain, suffering and disability, as the result of dynamic interactions among biological, psychological, behavioral, social, cultural and environmental factors. Consequently, assessment requires not only the examination of the biological dimension, but of the psychological and social dimensions as well. A patient’s experience of pain and response to any treatment for pain are affected not only by biologically determined nociceptive (nervous system transmission) processes, but also by psychological factors such as mood (for example, depression, anxiety) and appraisals (thoughts and beliefs about the pain), as well as by psychosocial factors such as the responses of others (for example, family, friends,
Introduction: Due to the growing economy, population diversity is significantly increasing and it is urging health care providers to understand and communicate with diverse cultural and ethnic populations. From here, the term cultural competency was originated and it’s defined as a” set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and policies that come together in a system, agency, or among professionals and enables that system, agency, or those professionals to work effectively in cross-cultural situations”.(1) Health care providers need to treat patients holistically with respect of their cultural values and traditions, which may interfere and sometimes complicate a recommended treatment, not to mention a significant disparities in oral and general health in these minorities of cultural population have been noticed.(2,3) It is important to mention that perception of seeking professional care varies significantly among different ethnic and cultural groups resulting in poor oral health and negligence of seeking professional care. Therefore, health care quality and effectiveness require a thorough understanding of traditions, cultural values, attitude and background of the diverse cultural groups seeking dental care.(2) Literature review:
Unlike physical pain, for some emotional pain has no conceivable end, the pain of something such as a family death has a lasting effect that never reaches a resolution, and conversely to physical pain, emotional pain is not traditionally classified as ‘pain’ in that there is no distress signal, no accompanying precursory depression and the pain is both sudden and common; with contemporary psychologists referring to it more as ‘suffering’ rather than pain (Biro 2010). Most people will experience some form of emotional anguish in their lives, whether it be through the death of a loved one, the breakdown of a relationship or social exclusion. However, the argument as to whether chronic emotional pain is more severe than chronic physical pain remains