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Depression is a psychological disorder. Interrelationships between depression and physical health are evident, and may manifest as commonly unrecognizable signs and symptoms. This inquiry may support clinicians in optimizing treatment for patients who undergo surgical procedures likely to induce pain, who also present with underlying depression. If clinical depression is implicated as a variable which negatively influences a patient's perception of pain, or which serves as a barrier to pain relief, poor clinical outcomes may result. Understanding the barriers to postoperative pain management,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Depression is a psychological disorder. Interrelationships between depression and physical health are evident, and may manifest as commonly unrecognizable signs and symptoms. This inquiry may support clinicians in optimizing treatment for patients who undergo surgical procedures likely to induce pain, who also present with underlying depression. If clinical depression is implicated as a variable which negatively influences a patient's perception of pain, or which serves as a barrier to pain relief, poor clinical outcomes may result. Understanding the barriers to postoperative pain management, with an emphasis on depression as a variable co-morbidity, may challenge conventional therapeutic modalities currently in use.
Autorenporträt
Olaoluwa, Lewis
Lewis Olaoluwa is a former practicing B.S.N. RN. specializing in the Burn ICU and recent M.S.N graduate as a Nurse Anesthetist. His body of work sought to establish a meaningful relationship between depressed patients and there experience of pain in the postoperative period, in an effort to better guide clinicians in vulnerable populations.