Project ECHO Telementoring Intervention for Managing Chronic Pain in Primary Care: Insights from a Qualitative Study

被引:68
作者
Carlin, Leslie [1 ]
Zhao, Jane [2 ]
Dubin, Ruth [3 ]
Taenzer, Paul [4 ]
Sidrak, Hannah [5 ]
Furlan, Andrea [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Dept Phys Therapy, Toronto, ON, Canada
[2] Univ Hlth Network, Toronto Rehabil Inst, Outpatient Serv Project ECHO, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Queens Univ, Dept Family Med, Kingston, ON, Canada
[4] Queens Univ, Dept Phys Med & Rehabil, Kingston, ON, Canada
[5] Univ New South Wales, Tweed Hosp, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[6] Univ Toronto, Univ Hlth Network, Dept Med, Toronto Rehabil Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
Chronic Pain; Pain Management; Telehealth; Opioids; Education; Continuing; CHRONIC NONCANCER PAIN; ACCACCORD PROGRAM; MANAGEMENT; COMMUNITIES; EDUCATION; VETERANS; OUTCOMES; PATIENT; ACCESS; TRUST;
D O I
10.1093/pm/pnx233
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
Objective. Family physicians in Canada receive little training in chronic pain management; concomitantly, they face increasing pressure to reduce their prescribing of opioids. Project ECHO Ontario Chronic Pain/Opioid Stewardship (ECHO) is a telementoring intervention for primary care practitioners that enhances their pain management skills. This qualitative study reports participants' experiences and assessment of ECHO. Design. An opportunistic sample of multidisciplinary primary care providers attending one of three residential weekend workshops participated in focus group discussions. Setting. University or hospital facilities in Toronto, Thunder Bay, and Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Subjects. Seventeen physicians and 20 allied health professionals. Methods. Six focus group discussions were conducted at three different sites during 2014 and 2015. Transcripts were analyzed using a qualitativedescriptive approach involving analytic immersion in the data, reflection, and achieving consensus around themes discerned from transcribed discussions. Results. Findings resolved into five main themes: 1) challenges of managing chronic pain in primary care; 2) ECHO participation and improvement in patient-provider interaction and participant knowledge; 3) the diffusion of knowledge gained through ECHO to participants' colleagues and patients; 4) ECHO participation generating a sense of community; and 5) disadvantages associated with participating in ECHO. Conclusions. Managing patients with chronic pain in primary care can be difficult, particularly in remote or underserved practices. Project ECHO offers guidance to primary care practitioners for their most challenging patients, promotes knowledge acquisition and diffusion, and stimulates the development of a "community of practice."
引用
收藏
页码:1140 / 1146
页数:7
相关论文
共 32 条
  • [1] Demonopolizing Medical Knowledge
    Arora, Sanjeev
    Thornton, Karla
    Komaromy, Miriam
    Kalishman, Summers
    Katzman, Joanna
    Duhigg, Daniel
    [J]. ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2014, 89 (01) : 30 - 32
  • [2] Expanding Access to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment-Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO) Project: Disruptive Innovation in Specialty Care
    Arora, Sanjeev
    Kalishman, Summers
    Thornton, Karla
    Dion, Denise
    Murata, Glen
    Deming, Paulina
    Parish, Brooke
    Brown, John
    Komaromy, Miriam
    Colleran, Kathleen
    Bankhurst, Arthur
    Katzman, Joanna
    Harkins, Michelle
    Curet, Luis
    Cosgrove, Ellen
    Pak, Wesley
    [J]. HEPATOLOGY, 2010, 52 (03) : 1124 - 1133
  • [3] SCAN-ECHO for Pain Management: Implementing a Regional Telementoring Training for Primary Care Providers
    Ball, Sherry
    Wilson, Brigid
    Ober, Scott
    Mchaourab, Ali
    [J]. PAIN MEDICINE, 2018, 19 (02) : 262 - 268
  • [4] Contrasting Tensions Between Patients and PCPs in Chronic Pain Management: A Qualitative Study
    Bergman, Alicia A.
    Matthias, Marianne S.
    Coffing, Jessica M.
    Krebs, Erin E.
    [J]. PAIN MEDICINE, 2013, 14 (11) : 1689 - 1697
  • [5] You Present like a Drug Addict: Patient and Clinician Perspectives on Trust and Trustworthiness in Chronic Pain Management
    Buchman, Daniel Z.
    Ho, Anita
    Illes, Judy
    [J]. PAIN MEDICINE, 2016, 17 (08) : 1394 - 1406
  • [6] What's trust got to do with it? Revisiting opioid contracts
    Buchman, Daniel Z.
    Ho, Anita
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS, 2014, 40 (10) : 673 - 677
  • [7] What Can We Learn from First-Year Medical Students' Perceptions of Pain in the Primary Care Setting?
    Corrigan, Corinne
    Desnick, Laurel
    Marshall, Susan
    Bentov, Nathalie
    Rosenblatt, Roger A.
    [J]. PAIN MEDICINE, 2011, 12 (08) : 1216 - 1222
  • [8] NO ONE WANTS TO BE THE CANDY MAN: Ambivalent Medicalization and Clinician Subjectivity in Pain Management
    Crowley-Matoka, Megan
    True, Gala
    [J]. CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 2012, 27 (04) : 689 - 712
  • [9] ECHO Ontario Chronic Pain & Opioid Stewardship: Providing access and building capacity for primary care providers in underserviced, rural, and remote communities
    Dubin, Ruth E.
    Flannery, John
    Taenzer, Paul
    Smith, Andrew
    Smith, Karen
    Fabico, Ralph
    Zhao, Jane
    Cameron, Lindsay
    Chmelnitsky, Dana
    Williams, Rob
    Carlin, Leslie
    Sidrak, Hannah
    Arora, Sanjeev
    Furlan, Andrea D.
    [J]. GLOBAL TELEHEALTH 2015: INTEGRATING TECHNOLOGY AND INFORMATION FOR BETTER HEALTHCARE, 2015, 209 : 15 - 22
  • [10] Non-medical use of prescription opioids and prescription opioid-related harms: why so markedly higher in North America compared to the rest of the world?
    Fischer, Benedikt
    Keates, Annette
    Buehringer, Gerhard
    Reimer, Jens
    Rehm, Juergen
    [J]. ADDICTION, 2014, 109 (02) : 177 - 181