Surgery
Approaches to person-centered pain management plans for patients with chronic pain undergoing surgery.
A comprehensive exploration of tailoring perioperative pain strategies to individual chronic pain experiences, addressing physical, psychological, social, and practical factors to improve outcomes and patient satisfaction.
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Published by Peter Collins
August 08, 2025 - 3 min Read
Pain management for patients with chronic pain who are preparing for surgery requires a thoughtful, context-aware approach that respects their prior experiences while integrating evidence-based perioperative practices. Clinicians must assess current pain mechanisms, medication histories, and functional goals, then align anesthesia, analgesia, and rehabilitation plans with the patient’s values. This means identifying potential interactions with ongoing therapies, such as opioids, antidepressants, anticonvulsants, or nonpharmacologic modalities, and coordinating with multidisciplinary teams. The aim is to minimize suffering, reduce the risk of withdrawal or relapse, and support a smoother recovery trajectory that preserves function and quality of life after the procedure.
A person-centered plan begins with shared decision-making, where clinicians listen for the patient’s priorities, fears, and expectations. Through open conversations, patients contribute insights about what has helped in the past, which coping strategies have been successful, and how pain has limited daily activities. Documenting these preferences helps guide choices around analgesic regimens, nerve blocks, regional techniques, and nonpharmacologic supports like physical therapy, mindfulness, and cognitive behavioral strategies. Collaboration extends beyond the operating room to ensure consistent communication across surgeons, anesthesiologists, nurses, pharmacists, and family members, so the plan remains coherent across care transitions.
Effective plans balance medication plans with nonpharmacologic supports and safety.
The first step in constructing a personalized plan is a thorough preoperative assessment that gathers medical history, pain chronologies, and functional priorities. Clinicians should map how pain interferes with sleep, mood, activity, and social roles, then identify protective factors and risk elements such as sleep disorders or substance use. This assessment informs tailored analgesia goals, such as minimizing breakthrough pain, preventing hyperalgesia, and preserving cognitive clarity after anesthesia. By integrating patient-reported outcomes with objective measures, the team can set realistic targets, adjust expectations, and prepare for contingencies should intraoperative decisions require modification.
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In practice, a customized strategy often combines pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic elements anchored in evidence and patient preference. Multimodal analgesia may include acetaminophen, NSAIDs, gabapentinoids, regional blocks, or local anesthetics to reduce opioid exposure. Equally important are nonpharmacologic supports: guided breathing, early mobilization, cold/heat therapy, and tailored physical therapy plans. For patients with opioid tolerance or dependence, tapering plans, withdrawal risk assessment, and ongoing addiction support should be integrated into the perioperative timeline. The overarching goal is to achieve meaningful pain relief while maintaining safety, function, and participation in recovery activities.
Clear education empowers patients to participate actively in their care.
Implementing a person-centered plan requires a coordinated care pathway that anticipates transitions from hospital to home. Clear handoffs, written care plans, and patient-facing instructions reduce confusion and anxiety. Pharmacists play a pivotal role in reconciling medications, adjusting doses, and monitoring for adverse effects or interactions. Patients benefit from a preparation checklist that covers pain management expectations, activity goals, and when to seek help. Additionally, caregiver involvement should be structured so family members understand signs of inadequate pain control, delirium risk, or functional decline and know how to respond appropriately. This proactive approach promotes continuity and confidence throughout recovery.
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Education is a cornerstone of success; patients who understand their pain management plan are more likely to engage with prescribed strategies and report results accurately. Practical teaching should cover how different medications work, potential side effects, nonverbal cues of pain, and the importance of early movement to prevent stiffness. Teaching should be individualized, with literacy-appropriate materials, visual aids, and opportunities for questions. Regular reinforcement during the perioperative period helps prevent medication errors and reassures patients they remain active partners in their care. When patients feel informed, adherence improves, reducing complications and length of stay.
Social context and support networks shape recovery trajectories.
Psychological resilience and expectation-setting are integral to successful pain management in the surgical context. Preoperative counseling can address fear, anxiety, and perceived loss of control, while postoperative support emphasizes coping strategies that sustain recovery momentum. Clinicians might employ brief cognitive-behavioral techniques, relaxation training, or mindfulness exercises to reduce pain perception and improve sleep. Aligning expectations with likely trajectories helps prevent disappointment and discouragement if pain remains challenging. By normalizing emotional responses and offering practical tools, teams foster a sense of mastery that translates into better engagement with rehabilitation and adherence to the plan.
Social factors, including family dynamics, work demands, and access to resources, influence outcomes after surgery. A patient-centered plan acknowledges these determinants by linking care with community services, transportation support, or telehealth follow-ups when in-person visits are limited. Social support can buffer stress and enhance adherence to pain regimens and activity programs. Clinicians should screen for barriers to recovery, such as caregiver burnout or financial strain, and connect patients with social workers or case managers who can coordinate solutions. By addressing the broader context, the plan becomes more robust and sustainable across recovery phases.
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Ongoing evaluation and adjustment sustain improvements in outcomes.
Intraoperative decisions should be guided by the patient’s preoperative preferences and risk profile. Anesthesiologists can tailor anesthesia methods to minimize cognitive load and delirium risk, selecting regional techniques when appropriate and planning for airway or hemodynamic considerations. Postoperative analgesia should reflect the multimodal strategy outlined in advance, with options that accommodate potential drug interactions and renal or hepatic function. Early communication about pain targets, expected discomfort, and relief milestones helps both patients and caregivers prepare for the postoperative period. Close monitoring allows rapid adjustments to ensure comfort without compromising safety or mobility.
A robust follow-up plan is essential to assess the effectiveness of the pain management approach after discharge. Scheduling timely check-ins, reviewing pain diaries, and adjusting medications based on patient feedback supports continuous improvement. Telemedicine visits can provide convenient, nonintrusive opportunities to assess function, mood, and sleep quality while addressing emerging issues. Providers should validate patient experiences, celebrate progress, and recalibrate goals as recovery unfolds. If persistent pain or side effects arise, escalation strategies should be ready, including referrals to pain psychology, physical therapy, or pain medicine specialists as needed.
Ethical considerations underpin every aspect of person-centered pain care. Respecting autonomy means honoring patient decisions even when they conflict with traditional pathways, provided safety is maintained. Transparency about risks, alternatives, and likely outcomes sustains trust and supports informed consent. Equity requires attention to disparities in access to multimodal therapies and supportive resources. Clinicians should strive to reduce bias, ensure language clarity, and provide interpretation services when needed. By embedding ethics into the care plan, teams safeguard patient dignity and promote justice in pain management across diverse populations.
Finally, leadership and organizational culture influence how well these approaches take root. Institutions that invest in multidisciplinary teams, patient education programs, and data-driven quality improvement tend to achieve more consistent, person-centered outcomes. Culture change involves training clinicians to value patient narratives, share decision-making power, and continually audit pain management practices for effectiveness and safety. When systems support providers to implement individualized plans, patients experience less fear, better function, and a greater sense of partnership that extends beyond the surgical episode into long-term well-being.
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