Perhaps the only thing worse than being diagnosed with cancer yourself is watching someone you care about suffer through it – something University of Virginia nurse scientist and assistant professor Virginia LeBaron knows from experience.
Her father quickly died of cancer, and in significant pain, in 2002. LeBaron worked for years as a palliative care nurse practitioner in Nepal and India, where pain relief medications like morphine were scarce and acute cancer pain high. She studied the incidence of untreated cancer pain in Southwest Virginia, where access to opioids, the gold standard for serious cancer pain, is additionally complicated by concerns about its abuse and diversion.
But relief from cancer pain, she said, is only the first step.
“Short of a cure for cancer,” LeBaron explained, “responsibly and compassionately managing pain is our baseline goal as clinicians. But in many cases, the approach to pain relief can be a blunt, one-size-fits-all instrument. My hope is to improve our understanding of cancer pain – why and under what conditions it happens, what its effect is on both patients and their family caregivers, and how it’s best relieved – and to thoughtfully identify and deploy personalized pharmacologic and non-drug solutions to treat it.”

