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Artikel ; Online: Emergency Providers’ Pain Management in Patients Transferred to Intensive Care Unit for Urgent Surgical Interventions

Quincy K. Tran / Tina Nguyen / Gurshawn Tuteja / Laura Tiffany / Ashley Aitken / Kevin Jones / Rebecca Duncan / Jeffrey Rea / Lewis Rubinson / Daniel Haase

Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, Vol 19, Iss

2018  Band 5

Abstract: Introduction: Pain is the most common complaint for an emergency department (ED) visit, but ED pain management is poor. Reasons for poor pain management include providers’ concerns for drug-seeking behaviors and perceptions of patients’ complaints. ... ...

Abstract Introduction: Pain is the most common complaint for an emergency department (ED) visit, but ED pain management is poor. Reasons for poor pain management include providers’ concerns for drug-seeking behaviors and perceptions of patients’ complaints. Patients who had objective findings of long bone fractures were more likely to receive pain medication than those who did not, despite pain complaints. We hypothesized that patients who were interhospital-transferred from an ED to an intensive care unit (ICU) for urgent surgical interventions would display objective pathology for pain and thus receive adequate pain management at ED departure. Methods: This was a retrospective study at a single, quaternary referral, academic medical center. We included non-trauma adult ED patients who were interhospital-transferred and underwent operative interventions within 12 hours of ICU arrival between July 2013 and June 2014. Patients who had incomplete ED records, required invasive mechanical ventilation, or had no pain throughout their ED stay were excluded. Primary outcome was the percentage of patients at ED departure achieving adequate pain control of ≤ 50% of triage level. We performed multivariable logistic regression to assess association between demographic and clinical variables with inadequate pain control. Results: We included 112 patients from 39 different EDs who met inclusion criteria. Mean pain score at triage and ED departure was 8 (standard deviation 8 and 5 [3]), respectively. Median of total morphine equivalent unit (MEU) was 7.5 [5–13] and MEU/kg total body weight (TBW) was 0.09 [0.05–0.16] MEU/kg, with median number of pain medication administration of 2 [1–3] doses. Time interval from triage to first narcotic dose was 61 (35–177) minutes. Overall, only 38% of patients achieved adequate pain control. Among different variables, only total MEU/kg was associated with significant lower risk of inadequate pain control at ED departure (adjusted odds ratio = 0.22; 95% confidence interval = 0.05–0.92, p = 0.037). ...
Schlagwörter Medicine ; R ; Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ; RC86-88.9
Thema/Rubrik (Code) 616
Sprache Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum 2018-08-01T00:00:00Z
Verlag eScholarship Publishing, University of California
Dokumenttyp Artikel ; Online
Datenquelle BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (Lebenswissenschaftliche Auswahl)

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