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    The Difficulties of Managing Pain in People Living with Frailty: The Potential for Digital Phenotyping.

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    Author
    Walsh, David A
    Ogliari, Giulia
    Cowley, Alison
    Collins, Jemima T
    Keyword
    Pain
    Frailty
    Digital
    Phenotyping
    Chronic pain
    
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    Publisher's URL
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40266-024-01101-4
    Abstract
    Pain and frailty are closely linked. Chronic pain is a risk factor for frailty, and frailty is a risk factor for pain. People living with frailty also commonly have cognitive impairment, which can make assessment of pain and monitoring of pain management even more difficult. Pain may be sub-optimally treated in people living with frailty, people living with cognitive impairment and those with both these factors. Reasons for sub-optimal treatment in these groups are pharmacological (increased drug side effects, drug–drug interactions, polypharmacy), non-pharmacological (erroneous beliefs about pain, ageism, bidirectional communication challenges), logistical (difficulty in accessing primary care practitioners and unaffordable cost of drugs), and, particularly in cognitive impairment, related to communication difficulties. Thorough assessment and characterisation of pain, related sensations, and their functional, emotional, and behavioural consequences (“phenotyping”) may help to enhance the assessment of pain, particularly in people with frailty and cognitive impairment, as this may help to identify who is most likely to respond to certain types of treatment. This paper discusses the potential role of “digital phenotyping” in the assessment and management of pain in people with frailty. Digital phenotyping is concerned with observable characteristics in digital form, such as those obtained from sensing-capable devices, and may provide novel and more informative data than existing clinical approaches regarding how pain manifests and how treatment strategies affect it. The processing of extensive digital and usual data may require powerful algorithms, but processing these data could lead to a better understanding of who is most likely to benefit from specific and targeted treatments.
    Citation
    Collins, J.T. et al. (2024) ‘The Difficulties of Managing Pain in People Living with Frailty: The Potential for Digital Phenotyping’, Drugs & Aging, pp. 1–10
    Publisher
    Drugs & Aging
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/18325
    Collections
    Rheumatology
    Healthcare of Older People

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