Topics in PAIN SPRING 2016 PEER-REVIEWED EXCELLENCE in LIFE CARE PLANNING SINCE 2006 VOL
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Spring 2014 vol. XIV, no.2 Spring 2016 vol. XVI, no.1 Topics in PAIN SPRING 2016 PEER-REVIEWED EXCELLENCE IN LIFE CARE PLANNING SINCE 2006 VOL. XVI NO. 1 Journal of Nurse Life Care Planning is the official peer- reviewed publication of the American Association of Nurse Life Care Planners. Articles, statements, and opinions contained herein are those of the author(s) and are not necessarily the official policy of the AANLCP® or the editors, unless expressly stated as such. JOURNAL OF NURSE LIFE CARE PLANNING ® The Association reserves the right to accept, reject, or alter SPRING 2016 manuscripts or advertising material submitted for TABLE OF CONTENTS publication. The Journal of Nurse Life Care 12 Book Review: ASPMN 34 Deep Brain Stimulation: Planning is published quarterly in spring, summer, winter, and Core Curriculum for Pain An Off-Label Surgical Therapy fall. Members of AANLCP® Management Nursing for Refractory Chronic Pain receive the Journal subscription Dawn L Cook RN, LNCP-C, CLCP, CLNC Laura Sperry MSN RN ANP-C , electronically as a membership benefit. Back issues are available Lin Zhang MD PhD, Kia Shahlaie in electronic (PDF) format on 13 Book Review: Being Mortal. the association website. Journal Medicine and What Matters in 41 Psychological Interventions for contents are also indexed at the the End by Atul Gawande Chronic Pain: A brief overview Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature Ann M. Peterson, RN, EdD, MSN, FNP- Whitney N. Pierce, RN, PsyD, BCB (CINAHL) at ebscohost.com. BC, LNCC Adam A. Kristevski, PsyD Please forward all email address 14 Chronic Pain: A Simple Review 45 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy changes to AANLCP® marked “Journal-Notice of Address For a Not So Simple Pathology (CBT) for Chronic Pain Update.” Kelly K. Campbell, RN, BSN, CP, CLCN, Michael Coupland CPsych, RPsych, CRC CLCP, Michael Stanton-Hicks, MD Contents and format copyright 52 Pain Management and by the American Association of Nurse Life Care Planners. All 21 Starting a life care plan for a Interventions: A Brief rights reserved. For permission patient with chronic pain Bibliography of Books to reprint articles, graphics, or Anne Sambucini RN, CCM, CDMS, Compiled by David Dillard BA MLS charts from this journal, please request to AANLCP® headed CNLCP, MSC-C “Journal-Reprint Permissions” 54 You CAN take it with you: citing the volume number, 23 A Child in Pain equipment and supplies for the article title, author and intended Kelly K. Campbell, RN, BSN, CP, CLCN, Nurse Life Care Planner, on the reprinting purpose. CLCP, Michael Stanton-Hicks, MD road again Neither the Journal nor the Dawn L Cook RN, LNCP-C, CLCP, CLNC Association guarantees, 28 Opioid Use In The Elderly warrants, or endorses any Tim R. Covington, MS, PharmD, product or service advertised in this publication nor do they Dane A. Higgins, MBA, PharmD guarantee any claims made by any product or service representative. DEPARTMENTS In order to make safe and effective judgments using 3 From the Editor 8 Contributors to this Issue NANDA-I nursing diagnoses it is essential that nurses refer to the definitions and defining 4 Information for Authors 11 Letters to the Editor characteristics of the diagnoses listed in this work. 6 A Message from the President 58 Issue Index AANLCP JOURNAL OF NURSE LIFE CARE PLANNING ISSN 1942-4469 2 SPRING 2016 PEER-REVIEWED EXCELLENCE IN LIFE CARE PLANNING SINCE 2006 VOL. XVI NO. 1 By the time this issue reaches you, I hope I’ll have had many opportunities to meet you at the annual conference in San Antonio. I’ve always had a good time at professional conferences. I’ll bet many of you have noticed a pattern to your conference attendance; it follows the same trajectory as Benner’s classic work on how nurses progress from novice to expert with the help of teachers along the way. The first conference you go to, you attend all the basic sessions— for me as a new grad in critical care, that meant fluids and electrolytes, basic arrhythmias, acid/base balance and blood gases, ventilator management, and some fun sessions on the new and exciting research on endogenous corticosteroids in stress (Hans Selye himself spoke that year), neurology weirdness, and hemodynamic monitoring. After a year or two, you notice you gravitate to more advanced topics. As your professional life goes on and you begin to take some formal or informal leadership roles, you pick up new subspecialties and want to attend associated conference topics. If you attend more basic ones it’s not for the knowledge, but to see how others teach them so you can help others learn what you know. Maybe you’re running a business where you teach your employees or your subcontractors. Gradually, you realize that your practice has reached the expert stage. You wonder if there’s going to be something new to learn at every conference you attend; you learn there is, even as you’ve discovered you’re getting asked to be a presenter with that augmented badge and all. As nurses, we began to teach in our first clinical rotations (even when we didn’t know very much at all). As life care planners now, though, we’re expected to teach not just patients but attorneys, triers of fact, trust officers, and others who need to know what we know. Let’s not forget the ones coming behind us. Newer nurse life care planners will be looking to us as role models and teachers. I’ve always felt that one of the great things about nursing is that it’s explicitly collaborative. We help each other out. I remember the day I decided to take up life care planning and cold-called two nurse life care planners in my area after finding them in Google. Each spent more than an hour with me, a perfect stranger, telling me about nurse life care planning, getting clients, education, and the association. They could have said, “Hmmm, a new competitor, I’ll just blow her off,” but they didn’t. I felt welcomed and encouraged to stay in touch with these women as colleagues, and I have. This is why I always have time to chat when somebody calls me with a question. Sometimes I don’t have a good answer, but I can usually send them to someone who does. Mostly, though, I just want to do what I can to help other people understand nurse life care planning, the power that the nursing process gives to all of us at every level. I’m easy to find on From the Editor From the ‘net, and I get these calls pretty often; I hope I can always be of use, like Homer in John Irving’s classic The Cider House Rules. You probably do too. We’re nurses. We can help. Hope you all had a great conference! Wendie A. Howland MN RN-BC CRRN CCM CNLCP LNCC Editor, JNLCP [email protected] AANLCP JOURNAL OF NURSE LIFE CARE PLANNING ISSN 1942-4469 3 SPRING 2016 PEER-REVIEWED EXCELLENCE IN LIFE CARE PLANNING SINCE 2006 VOL. XVI NO. 1 Information for Authors AANLCP® invites interested nurses figure, photo, or art should be on Manuscripts not published will be and allied professionals to submit a separate page, labeled to match returned to the author. Queries article queries or manuscripts that its reference in text, with credits may be addressed to the care educate and inform the Nurse Life if needed (e.g., Table 1, Common of the Editor at: whowland@ Care Planner about current clinical nursing diagnoses in SCI; Figure 3, howlandhealthconsulting.com practice methods, professional Time to endpoints by intervention, development, and the promotion American Cancer Society, 2003) Live Manuscript Review Process of Nurse Life Care Planning within links are encouraged. Please include the medical-legal community. the full URL for each. Submitted articles are peer Submitted material must be reviewed by Nurse Life Care original. Manuscripts and queries Editing and Permissions Planners with diverse backgrounds may be addressed to the Editorial The author must accompany the in life care planning, case Committee. Authors should use the submission with written release management, rehabilitation, following guidelines for articles to be from: and the nursing profession. considered for publication. Please ◾ Any recognizable identified Acceptance is based on note capitalization of Nurse Life Care facility for the use of name or manuscript content, originality, Plan, Planning, etc. image suitability for the intended ◾ Any recognizable person in a audience, relevance to Nurse Life Text photograph, for unrestricted use Manuscript length: 1500 – 3000 of the image Care Planning, and quality of the words ◾ Any copyright holder, for submitted material. If you would ◾ Use Word© format (.doc, .docx) copyrighted materials including like to review articles for this or Pages (.pages) illustrations, photographs, journal, please contact the Editor. ◾ Submit only original manuscript tables, etc. not under consideration by other AANLCP® Journal publications All authors must disclose any Reviewers for this issue ◾ Put the title and page number relationship with facilities, Dawn Cook RN LNCP-C CLCP CLNC in a header on each page (using institutions, organizations, or the Header feature in Word) companies mentioned in their Mariann Cosby DNPg MPA MSN RN ◾ Use Times, Times New Roman, work. All accepted manuscripts PHN CEN NE-BC LNCC CLCP CCM or Ariel font, 12 point are subject to editing, which MSCC ◾ Place author name, contact may involve only minor changes information, and article title on of grammar, punctuation, Linda Husted MPH RN CNLCP LNCC a separate title page, so author paragraphing, etc. However, some CCM CDMS CRC name can be blinded for editorial editing may involve condensing Shelly Kinney MSN RN CCM CNLCP review or restructuring the narrative.