| Literature DB >> 26968352 |
Jorien G J Pierik1, Sivera A Berben2, Maarten J IJzerman3, Menno I Gaakeer4, Fred L van Eenennaam5, Arie B van Vugt6, Carine J M Doggen3.
Abstract
While acute musculoskeletal pain is a frequent complaint, its management is often neglected. An implementation of a nurse-initiated pain protocol based on the algorithm of a Dutch pain management guideline in the emergency department might improve this. A pre-post intervention study was performed as part of the prospective PROTACT follow-up study. During the pre- (15 months, n = 504) and post-period (6 months, n = 156) patients' self-reported pain intensity and pain treatment were registered. Analgesic provision in patients with moderate to severe pain (NRS ≥4) improved from 46.8% to 68.0%. Over 10% of the patients refused analgesics, resulting into an actual analgesic administration increase from 36.3% to 46.1%. Median time to analgesic decreased from 10 to 7 min (P < 0.05), whereas time to opioids decreased from 37 to 15 min (P < 0.01). Mean pain relief significantly increased to 1.56 NRS-points, in patients who received analgesic treatment even up to 2.02 points. The protocol appeared to lead to an increase in analgesic administration, shorter time to analgesics and a higher clinically relevant pain relief. Despite improvements, suffering moderate to severe pain at ED discharge was still common. Protocol adherence needs to be studied in order to optimize pain management.Entities:
Keywords: Acute musculoskeletal pain; Analgesics; Clinically relevant pain relief; Emergency department; Nurse-initiated pain protocol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26968352 DOI: 10.1016/j.ienj.2016.02.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Emerg Nurs ISSN: 1878-013X Impact factor: 2.142