儿科急诊科出院后骨折疼痛的家庭非药物干预

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Alexandria J Wiersma MD , Blake Nielsen MSTAT , Michael Webb MS , Elizabeth Alpern MD, MSCE , David C. Brousseau MD , James M. Chamberlain MD , Joseph J. Zorc MD, MSCE , Lynn Babcock MD MS , Theresa Frey MD , Julie C. Leonard MD, MPH , Samina Ali MD , Bradley J. Barney PHD , Amy L. Drendel DO, MS , PECARN IMPROVE and PECARN Registry Study Groups
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:非药物(生理和心理)干预被推荐用于儿科急诊科(PED)出院后急性疼痛的治疗。使用频率以及与镇痛和患者特征的关系尚未得到很好的描述。我们旨在确定非药物干预的类型和持续时间,描述它们与镇痛药使用的关系,并确定临床相关变量。方法:这是一项多地点前瞻性观察队列研究的二次分析,该研究纳入了2019年7月至2021年9月从7个儿科出院的4-17岁孤立性长骨骨折儿童。家长/监护人通过每日短信报告非药物干预和镇痛使用情况。结果共纳入1819名儿童。在PED出院后的第一周,96%的患者使用了至少1天的非药物干预,其中最频繁和持续使用的是分心和抬高。只有3%的人报告在第一周内单独使用止痛药,而仅使用非药物干预的比例从9%增加到27%。与4-7岁儿童相比,11-13岁儿童非药物使用的可能性增加(OR 3.7 95% CI[1.4, 9.8])。出院时出现中度至重度疼痛的儿童也更有可能采用非药物干预措施(OR 2.1 [95% CI 1.1, 3.9])。结论儿童长骨骨折非药物干预比镇痛药物干预更频繁,持续时间更长。年龄的增加和出院时疼痛的严重程度与更多的使用有关。需要进行干预研究,为PED出院后的干预措施提供循证建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Home Use of Nonpharmacologic Interventions For Fracture Pain After Pediatric Emergency Department Discharge

Background

Nonpharmacologic (physical and psychological) interventions are recommended for the treatment of acute pain after pediatric emergency department (PED) discharge. Frequency of use and relation to analgesia and patient characteristics have not been well described.

Objectives

We aimed to determine the types and duration of nonpharmacologic interventions, describe their relationship with analgesic use, and identify clinically relevant associated variables.

Methods

This was a secondary analysis of a multi-site prospective observational cohort study of children aged 4–17 years discharged from 7 PEDs July 2019 through September 2021 with an isolated long bone fracture. Parents/guardians reported nonpharmacologic interventions and analgesic use via daily text messaging.

Results

1,819 children were included. During the first week after PED discharge, 96% used nonpharmacologic interventions at least 1 day, with distraction and elevation being the most frequently and consistently used. Only 3% reported using analgesia alone during the first week, while the proportion using only nonpharmacologic interventions tripled from 9% to 27%. Children aged 11–13 years had increased likelihood of nonpharmacologic use compared to those aged 4-7 years (OR 3.7 95% CI [1.4, 9.8]). Children with moderate to severe pain at discharge were also more likely to use nonpharmacologic interventions (OR 2.1 [95% CI 1.1, 3.9]).

Conclusions

Children with long bone fractures used nonpharmacologic interventions more frequently and for a longer duration than analgesic medications. Increasing age and pain severity at discharge were associated with greater use. Interventional studies are needed to provide evidence-informed recommendations for these interventions after PED discharge.
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来源期刊
Journal of Emergency Medicine
Journal of Emergency Medicine 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
6.70%
发文量
339
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Emergency Medicine is an international, peer-reviewed publication featuring original contributions of interest to both the academic and practicing emergency physician. JEM, published monthly, contains research papers and clinical studies as well as articles focusing on the training of emergency physicians and on the practice of emergency medicine. The Journal features the following sections: • Original Contributions • Clinical Communications: Pediatric, Adult, OB/GYN • Selected Topics: Toxicology, Prehospital Care, The Difficult Airway, Aeromedical Emergencies, Disaster Medicine, Cardiology Commentary, Emergency Radiology, Critical Care, Sports Medicine, Wound Care • Techniques and Procedures • Technical Tips • Clinical Laboratory in Emergency Medicine • Pharmacology in Emergency Medicine • Case Presentations of the Harvard Emergency Medicine Residency • Visual Diagnosis in Emergency Medicine • Medical Classics • Emergency Forum • Editorial(s) • Letters to the Editor • Education • Administration of Emergency Medicine • International Emergency Medicine • Computers in Emergency Medicine • Violence: Recognition, Management, and Prevention • Ethics • Humanities and Medicine • American Academy of Emergency Medicine • AAEM Medical Student Forum • Book and Other Media Reviews • Calendar of Events • Abstracts • Trauma Reports • Ultrasound in Emergency Medicine
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