Frederick Milgrim, Matthew Riscinti, Andrew Goldsmith, Arun Nagdev, Joseph Brown
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Managing acute pain in the Emergency Department (ED) is one of the primary roles of an Emergency Physician (EP), but the constraints of using opiate sparing medications provide an additional challenge for EPs to circumnavigate. In an effort to avoid opioids, many EPs have turned to ultrasound-guided nerve blocks (UGNBs), which have demonstrated outstanding analgesia, in addition to a strong safety profile, decreased risk of delirium, and shortened ED lengths of stay. Some of the primary obstacles to performing nerve blocks, however, are institutional barriers, including buy-in from ED leadership and other hospital stakeholders, ensuring appropriate equipment as well as a lack of provider familiarity with UGNBs. Here, we lay out a framework for developing a nerve block program from scratch, which includes highlighting the various stakeholders and their respective roles, how to set up quality assurance monitoring, educational guidelines, and safety measures. As more EPs are performing UGNBs globally, it is imperative for EDs to initiate block programs, and we hope that these guidelines help provide a starting point for such departmental initiatives.
期刊介绍:
Internal and Emergency Medicine (IEM) is an independent, international, English-language, peer-reviewed journal designed for internists and emergency physicians. IEM publishes a variety of manuscript types including Original investigations, Review articles, Letters to the Editor, Editorials and Commentaries. Occasionally IEM accepts unsolicited Reviews, Commentaries or Editorials. The journal is divided into three sections, i.e., Internal Medicine, Emergency Medicine and Clinical Evidence and Health Technology Assessment, with three separate editorial boards. In the Internal Medicine section, invited Case records and Physical examinations, devoted to underlining the role of a clinical approach in selected clinical cases, are also published. The Emergency Medicine section will include a Morbidity and Mortality Report and an Airway Forum concerning the management of difficult airway problems. As far as Critical Care is becoming an integral part of Emergency Medicine, a new sub-section will report the literature that concerns the interface not only for the care of the critical patient in the Emergency Department, but also in the Intensive Care Unit. Finally, in the Clinical Evidence and Health Technology Assessment section brief discussions of topics of evidence-based medicine (Cochrane’s corner) and Research updates are published. IEM encourages letters of rebuttal and criticism of published articles. Topics of interest include all subjects that relate to the science and practice of Internal and Emergency Medicine.