The unheard pain: why patient-related barriers remain the weakest link in cancer pain management

Published on June 30, 2026

Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2026 Jun 11;7:1874381. doi: 10.3389/fpain.2026.1874381. eCollection 2026.

ABSTRACT

Cancer pain remains a major challenge in oncology and palliative care despite the availability of clinical guidelines, effective analgesics, opioids, educational interventions, and non-pharmacological strategies. This Perspective argues that patient-related barriers remain one of the weakest links in cancer pain management because they are often treated as secondary obstacles rather than core determinants of treatment effectiveness. These barriers include fear of addiction, concerns about adverse effects, fatalistic beliefs, limited pain communication, low adherence, insufficient knowledge, and difficulties integrating pain management strategies into everyday life. Rather than framing these barriers as mere individual misconceptions, this article interprets them as interpretive-relational barriers that emerge from the interaction among personal beliefs, cultural meanings, emotional responses, clinical communication gaps, and health system limitations. Effective cancer pain care therefore requires moving beyond pharmacological availability toward routine assessment of patient barriers, culturally sensitive communication, individualized education, supported self-management, and professionally guided non-pharmacological strategies. This Perspective reframes patient-related barriers as a central clinical, educational, and policy target in cancer pain care, arguing that health services should institutionalize barrier screening, communication training, risk-based follow-up, and audits that evaluate not only pain intensity, but also treatment understanding, adherence, and communicative barriers.

PMID:42367236 | PMC:PMC13294291 | DOI:10.3389/fpain.2026.1874381