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Addressing the Psychosocial Needs of Individuals Living with Sickle Cell Disease 8th Annual Sickle cell Disease Educational Seminar 2016 The Culture and Politics of Pain Coretta Jenerette, PhD, RN, CNE Pat Corley, RN OBJECTIVE Describe the cultural and political aspects of living with SCD that lead to poor psycho-social health outcomes Culture Politics Challenges for Adults with Sickle Cell Disease 3 PERCEPTION OF SICKLE CELL Genetic disorder Affecting 100,000 in US Hallmark: PAIN REALITY OF SCD 5 CULTURE OF SICKLE CELL SICKLE CELL FIRST DESCRIBED IN THE LITERATURE • James Herrick was a doctor in • Chicago, USA, and wrote about his observations of a patient (dental student from the West Indies) with severe anemia. When blood samples were viewed under the microscope Herrick noted “peculiar elongated and sickle-shaped red blood corpuscles”. 7 TODD SAVITT, PHD: MEDICAL HISTORIAN • Savitt, T. L. (1981). The invisible malady: Sickle cell anemia in America, 1910-1970. Journal of the National Medical Association, 73(8), 739-746. • Savitt, T. L., & Goldberg, M. F. (1989). Herrick's 1910 case report of sickle cell anemia: The rest of the story. JAMA, 261(2), 266-271. • Savitt, T. L. (2010). Tracking down the first recorded sickle cell patient in western medicine. Journal of the National Medical Association, 102(11), 981-992. 8 Rare Plus…. “The problem with SCD is that it is both rare and prevalent in historically disenfranchised populations. So it is almost invisible to the American eye.” Wally Smith, MD 9 PAIN OF SCD VS CANCER PAIN CANCER PAIN Non-ischemic Continuous Progressive Predictable Terminal event Not questioned Many objective correlates May be absent Few to no ED visits Longitudinal specialty care SICKLE CELL PAIN Ischemic Intermittent Remitting Unpredictable Throughout life Questioned by healthcare providers Few objective correlates Prominent feature of the disease Frequent ED visits Episodic care (Smith & Alsalman, 2012) 10 DISPARITIES IN PAIN MANAGEMENT • Racial/Ethnic Minorities o Less adequate pain treatment o o Considers age, gender, pain intensity Pain intensity reporting contributes • Provider treatment disparities o o Own cultural beliefs Stereotypes Pain o Minority patients o Use of narcotics o (Mossey, 2011) “If you want to be dehumanized, go to the ED”. 12 CARE-SEEKING Mean Pain Score: 8.6 (SD 1.4) (Jenerette, Brewer, & Ataga, 2014) 13 Nurses’ Attitudes & Health-Related Stigmatization 14 WHAT IS HEALTH-RELATED STIGMA? refers to a form of devaluation, judgment or social disqualification of individuals based on a health-related condition (Bediako and colleagues, 2014; Jenerette & Brewer, 2010; Jenerette and colleagues, 2012) IMPACT OF HEALTH-RELATED STIGMA • Higher levels of depressive symptoms • Low self-esteem & feelings of hopelessness • Psychological disturbances (depression and anxiety) • Diminished ability to cope with pain Anie & Green, 2002; Edwards et al., 2005; Jenerette, Funk, & Murdaugh, 2005; Ohaeri et al., 1995; POLITICS OF SICKLE CELL Number of federal government requests for applications funded for sickle cell disease and cystic fibrosis: 1975–2004 (Smith and colleagues, 2006) ©2006 by American Academy of Pediatrics 2015 NIH Funding Comparison EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE • Do not consider the psycho-social aspects of living with SCD. o o o o o Depression/anxiety Fatigue Insomnia Social isolation Health-related stigma o o o o o Public Healthcare providers Social support Education Employment (Yawn and colleagues, 2014) 20 WRAPAROUND CARE a philosophy of care and defined planning process SUMMARY • Challenged by the intersection of culture and politics. • Culture might be improved with… o o o Increased SCD awareness Additional SCD education for healthcare provider Better prepare individuals with SCD to navigate the healthcare system • Increased SCD funding with an even political playing field • The goal is comprehensive wrapraound care SUMMARY FOR NURSES • Nurses should … Care for the whole patient. Listen. Advocate for vulnerable, underserved patients Believe pain is what the patient says it is and occurs when the patient says it does. Be on the frontlines of creating and using EBP It’s time for nursing to make a difference in the lives of patients living with SCD. SUMMARY FROM A SICKLE CELL WARRIOR I Could’ve Died last night QUESTIONS Thank you! CONTACT INFORMATION Coretta Jenerette [email protected] Pat Corley [email protected]