A Model for Cognitive‐Behavioral Interventions in Cancer Pain Management
- 14 June 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Image: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship
- Vol. 31 (2) , 151-155
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1547-5069.1999.tb00456.x
Abstract
Purpose: To propose a model for predicting success with cognitive‐behavioral interventions in cancer pain management. Practice guidelines are useful, however nurses currently have little theoretic or empiric basis for choosing one particular strategy over another. Moreover, nurses have no way of knowing if a particular intervention is likely to work.Organizing construct: The model indicates characteristics of a person in relation to interventions including skill and ability, outcome expectancies, perceived credibility, history of use, preferred coping style, and pain outcomes.Sources: The model was developed using sources identified through a literature search of relevant topics in MEDLINE, CINAHL, and Psychlit (1996‐1997), as well as through clinical experience.Conclusions: Continued empiric testing of the model is necessary to confirm proposed relationships and to assess accuracy of the model's predictions with various cognitive‐behavioral interventions. With this testing, the model can help nurses select appropriate interventions for individual patients.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perspectives Unifying Symptom InterpretationImage: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 1997
- Credibility and outcome of cognitive—behavioural and psychodynamic—interpersonal psychotherapyBritish Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1995
- Triangulation Reveals Theoretical Linkages and Outcomes in a Nursing Intervention StudyClinical Nurse Specialist, 1995
- Do Changes in Patient Beliefs and Coping Strategies Predict Temporomandibular Disorder Treatment Outcomes?The Clinical Journal of Pain, 1995
- A Model for Symptom ManagementImage: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 1994
- Effects of Behavioral Psychophysiological Treatment on Schoolchildren with Migraine in a Nonclinical Setting: Predictors and Process VariablesJournal of Pediatric Psychology, 1993
- Noninvasive Approaches to Pain Control in Terminal Illness: The Contribution of Psychological VariablesThe Hospice Journal, 1992
- Cognitive factors and persistent pain: A glimpse into pandora's boxCognitive Therapy and Research, 1992
- Assessing coping strategies: A theoretically based approach.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1989