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      Attitudes, Aptitudes, Barriers and Knowledge of Pain Physicians towards Palliative Care Practice – A National Survey, India

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          Abstract

          Objectives:

          The bio-psycho-socio-spiritual model is a common management approach in palliative care (PC) and chronic pain medicine (CPM), adopted by PC Physicians and Pain Physicians (PPs), respectively. There is a dearth of services and personnel of PC in India. As PPs are familiar with pain management and the bio-psycho-socio-spiritual model, we hypothesised that they would be willing to incorporate PC in their practice and therefore, sought to understand their attitudes/aptitudes/barriers/knowledge towards it.

          Materials and Methods:

          We did a cross-sectional cohort study through a national survey of Indian PPs. The ten- item validated, survey questionnaire was mailed to 1300 PPs having E mail and registered with Indian Society for Study of Pain.

          Results:

          We received responses from 6.6% of the PPs. About 10.39% did not want to practice PC; the rest were either practicing or wanted to, or were unable to. 81.8% had <10 years CPM experience while the rest had 10–15 years. About 53.3% PPs had <10 years’ experience in PC; 10.4% had > 10 years and the rest had not practiced. About 70% were motivated by human suffering or had “personal reasons.” About 40.26% had no barriers; the rest cited stress or lack of infrastructure/knowledge/skills/time/financial compensation. The majority chose institutional courses for training and the popular choice of duration of the course was 3 months. The opinion on financial viability/non-viability of PC was equally divided among the respondents. About 62.3% had “knowledge” but half of them lacked “skills;” 27.6% lacked both; the rest had no inclination towards PC. About a third felt multi-disciplinary care was feasible while half felt that it was partially feasible.

          Conclusion:

          Policy-makers, at regional to global levels are strategizing options for popularizing PC since it supports the dualistic model of cure and care, most essential for both, chronic-debilitating or life-limiting illnesses. The poor response to our survey was a major limiting factor. However, among the respondents, the majority showed both aptitude and a favourable attitude for PC practice. The inability to identify major barriers for not choosing PC did not support our hypothesis. However, we feel that PPs are a cohort who can be motivated/ encouraged to take up some form of brief, comprehensive courses in PC so that they can be conversant with the specific knowledge and skills needed to practice the multi-dimensional aspects of PC in their own settings.

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          Most cited references18

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          Is the CVI an acceptable indicator of content validity? Appraisal and recommendations.

          Nurse researchers typically provide evidence of content validity for instruments by computing a content validity index (CVI), based on experts' ratings of item relevance. We compared the CVI to alternative indexes and concluded that the widely-used CVI has advantages with regard to ease of computation, understandability, focus on agreement of relevance rather than agreement per se, focus on consensus rather than consistency, and provision of both item and scale information. One weakness is its failure to adjust for chance agreement. We solved this by translating item-level CVIs (I-CVIs) into values of a modified kappa statistic. Our translation suggests that items with an I-CVI of .78 or higher for three or more experts could be considered evidence of good content validity.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Indian J Palliat Care
                Indian J Palliat Care
                IJPC
                Indian Journal of Palliative Care
                Scientific Scholar
                0973-1075
                1998-3735
                Apr-Jun 2021
                12 August 2021
                : 27
                : 2
                : 242-250
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Pain and Palliative Medicine , St John’s National Academy of Health Sciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
                Author notes
                [* ] Corresponding author: Renuka Shantharam Pai, Department of Pain and Palliative Medicine, St John’s National Academy of Health Sciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. pairenuka@ 123456yahoo.co.in
                Article
                10.25259/IJPC_325_20
                10.25259/IJPC_325_20
                8428885
                34511791
                504945f9-ccda-42b8-870f-4b9539c7fe8d
                © 2021 Published by Scientific Scholar on behalf of Indian Jounal of Palliative Care

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

                History
                : 09 March 2020
                : 19 June 2021
                Categories
                Original Article

                Anesthesiology & Pain management
                attitudes-aptitude-barriers-knowledge,indian pain physicians,integration of palliative care with chronic pain services,national survey

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