院前疼痛管理协议的可变性:对美国院前护理协议的回顾。

IF 1.5 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Open Access Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2024-12-18 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.2147/OAEM.S480680
Timmy Li, Daniel Koloden, Jonathan Berkowitz, Dee Luo, Howard Luan, Charles Gilley, Gregory Kurgansky, Devin M Howell, Paul Barbara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:我们描述了美国用于疼痛管理的紧急医疗服务(EMS)协议,以阐明协议的系统性变异性。我们描述了治疗方案、给药途径、使用适应症、给药常规处方以及在儿科患者中的应用。方法:我们从http://www.emsprotocols.org网站上对所有可公开访问的EMS协议进行了审查,并辅以互联网搜索。将2021年6月至2022年1月的数据提取成数据收集表。我们开发了响应分类来总结数据,使用频率和比例来描述结果测量。结果:我们回顾了横跨43个州的104份EMS协议。最常见的止痛药物包括芬太尼(94.2%)、吗啡(70.2%)、氯胺酮(61.5%)、酮罗拉酸(40.4%)、口服对乙酰氨基酚(36.5%)、口服布洛芬(22.1%)和一氧化二氮(19.2%)。所有方案和药物中最常见的给药途径是静脉注射。芬太尼(65.3%)、吗啡(61.6%)、酮洛酸(50.0%)和氧化亚氮(40.0%)最常见的适应症是剧烈疼痛,但没有明确的程度。肌肉骨骼损伤和烧伤是吗啡最常见的适应症,分别占15.1%和19.2%。大多数方案规定了芬太尼(74.5%)、吗啡(64.4%)、氯胺酮(87.3%)、口服对乙酰氨基酚(56.8%)和口服布洛芬(59.1%)的体重剂量。然而,97.6%和100.0%的方案分别规定了固定剂量的酮酸和氧化亚氮。芬太尼、吗啡、口服对乙酰氨基酚和口服布洛芬可根据常规处方在bbb90.0%的方案中给药。然而,只有46.2%和75.0%的方案分别允许在儿科患者中使用酮罗拉酸和一氧化二氮。结论:我们发现EMS疼痛管理方案存在差异,包括允许的药物类型、给药途径、剂量和使用适应症。进一步的研究可能会评估跨EMS系统的标准化协议是否可以提高患者安全和护理质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Variability of Prehospital Pain Management Protocols: A Review of Prehospital Care Protocols in the United States.

Purpose: We describe emergency medical services (EMS) protocols for pain management in the United States to elucidate systemic variability in protocols. We describe types of pain medications included in protocols, routes of administration, indications for use, standing orders for dosing, and use in pediatric patients.

Methods: We performed a review of all publicly accessible EMS protocols from the website http://www.emsprotocols.org, supplemented with internet searches. Data were abstracted into a data collection form from June 2021 to January 2022. We developed categories of responses to summarize the data, using frequencies and proportions to describe outcome measures.

Results: We reviewed 104 EMS protocols, spanning 43 states. The most common pain management medications include fentanyl (94.2%), morphine (70.2%), ketamine (61.5%), ketorolac (40.4%), oral acetaminophen (36.5%), oral ibuprofen (22.1%), and nitrous oxide (19.2%). The most common route of administration across all protocols and medications is intravenous. Severe pain, without a specified level, is the most common indication for fentanyl (65.3%), morphine (61.6%), ketorolac (50.0%), and nitrous oxide (40.0%). Musculoskeletal injuries and burns are the most common indications for morphine, 15.1% and 19.2% of protocols, respectively. The majority of protocols dictate the weight-based dosing of fentanyl (74.5%), morphine (64.4%), ketamine (87.3%), oral acetaminophen (56.8%), and oral ibuprofen (59.1%). However, 97.6% and 100.0% of protocols dictate a fixed dose of ketorolac and nitrous oxide, respectively. Fentanyl, morphine, oral acetaminophen, and oral ibuprofen can be administered to pediatric patients based on standing orders among >90.0% of protocols. However, only 46.2% and 75.0% of protocols allow the use of ketorolac and nitrous oxide in pediatric patients, respectively.

Conclusion: We found variability in EMS pain management protocols including the types of allowed medications, routes of administration, dosing, and indications for use. Further studies may assess whether standardized protocols across EMS systems could improve patient safety and quality of care.

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来源期刊
Open Access Emergency Medicine
Open Access Emergency Medicine EMERGENCY MEDICINE-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
85
审稿时长
16 weeks
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