Tjitske D. Groenveld , Roeland A.L. Arpots , Marjan de Vries , Regina L.M. van Boekel , Evelien van Eeten , Harry van Goor , Vincent M.A Stirler
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Assessing factors related to patients and clinicians, particularly nurses, along with pain scores and their association with opioid administration is important before introducing non-pharmacological innovations in the emergency department.
Methods
A prospective cross-sectional study was conducted using multivariable logistic regression analysis. The primary outcome was the association of opioid administration with patient’s age, sex, pain acceptability, pain location, pre-hospital use of analgesics, baseline numeric rating scale (NRS) pain score at rest, desire for analgesics, and the nurses’ perception of the reported pain score. Secondary outcomes included NRS anxiety, analgesics use and prescription, patient satisfaction, and the patient’s definition of pain acceptability. Cut-off NRS pain scores for pain acceptability and desire for analgesics were calculated. Patient definitions of pain acceptability were determined using thematic analysis.
Results
Data from 236 patients were analyzed. Factors associated with administering opioids included nurse-perceived adequate pain score, higher baseline NRS pain scores, pre-hospital opioid use, and unacceptable pain. The cut-off NRS pain scores were 7 for pain acceptability and 6 for the desire for analgesics. Patients related pain acceptability to pain characteristics and situational context.
Conclusions
Nurse perception of the patient-reported pain score and pain acceptability are important determinants for administering analgesics. The insufficient discriminative power of a cut-off NRS pain score highlights that pain management should go beyond pain scores alone. These findings could enhance selecting patients with acute pain who may benefit from non-pharmacological interventions in the emergency department.
期刊介绍:
International Emergency Nursing is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to nurses and other professionals involved in emergency care. It aims to promote excellence through dissemination of high quality research findings, specialist knowledge and discussion of professional issues that reflect the diversity of this field. With an international readership and authorship, it provides a platform for practitioners worldwide to communicate and enhance the evidence-base of emergency care.
The journal publishes a broad range of papers, from personal reflection to primary research findings, created by first-time through to reputable authors from a number of disciplines. It brings together research from practice, education, theory, and operational management, relevant to all levels of staff working in emergency care settings worldwide.