Identification of Knowledge Structure of Pain Management Nursing Research Applying Text Network Analysis
10.4040/jkan.2019.49.5.538
- Author:
Chan Sook PARK
1
;
Eun Jun PARK
Author Information
1. Department of Nursing, Konkuk University Glocal Campus, Chungju, Korea. eunjunp@kku.ac.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Pain Management;
Nursing Care;
Pain Measurement;
Semantics
- MeSH:
Adolescent;
Aged;
Analgesia;
Child;
Chronic Pain;
Delivery of Health Care;
Humans;
Korea;
Nursing Care;
Nursing Research;
Nursing;
Pain Management;
Pain Measurement;
Quality of Life;
Semantics
- From:Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing
2019;49(5):538-549
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore and compare the knowledge structure of pain management nursing research, between Korea and other countries, applying a text network analysis. METHODS: 321 Korean and 6,685 international study abstracts of pain management, published from 2004 to 2017, were collected. Keywords and meaningful morphemes from the abstracts were analyzed and refined, and their co-occurrence matrix was generated. Two networks of 140 and 424 keywords, respectively, of domestic and international studies were analyzed using NetMiner 4.3 software for degree centrality, closeness centrality, betweenness centrality, and eigenvector community analysis. RESULTS: In both Korean and international studies, the most important, core-keywords were “pain,” “patient,” “pain management,” “registered nurses,” “care,” “cancer,” “need,” “analgesia,” “assessment,” and “surgery.” While some keywords like “education,” “knowledge,” and “patient-controlled analgesia” found to be important in Korean studies; “treatment,” “hospice palliative care,” and “children” were critical keywords in international studies. Three common sub-topic groups found in Korean and international studies were “pain and accompanying symptoms,” “target groups of pain management,” and “RNs' performance of pain management.” It is only in recent years (2016~17), that keywords such as “performance,” “attitude,” “depression,” and “sleep” have become more important in Korean studies than, while keywords such as “assessment,” “intervention,” “analgesia,” and “chronic pain” have become important in international studies. CONCLUSION: It is suggested that Korean pain-management researchers should expand their concerns to children and adolescents, the elderly, patients with chronic pain, patients in diverse healthcare settings, and patients' use of opioid analgesia. Moreover, researchers need to approach pain-management with a quality of life perspective rather than a mere focus on individual symptoms.