院前环境中与疼痛报告和疼痛严重程度相关的因素

Q2 Health Professions
R. Quinn, S. Masterson, D. Willis, D. Hennelly, C. Deasy, C. O’donnell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有效的疼痛管理策略需要了解感兴趣人群的疼痛流行病学,并在此基础上进行准确的测量,以制定质量改进计划。本研究的目的是估计院前疼痛的发生率,并探讨影响(1)疼痛记录的特征;(2)患者报告的疼痛程度。这项回顾性队列研究包括2020年期间国家救护车服务从业人员参加的212,401次护理事件。对患者和护理事件特征进行描述性分析,并对疼痛记录和疼痛严重程度进行回归分析。我们还使用笔记字段的文本模式匹配来估计没有记录疼痛评分评估的疼痛患者的比例。65%的患者有疼痛评分记录,29.5%的患者疼痛(11%为剧烈疼痛)。记录疼痛的可能性与以下因素密切相关:格拉斯哥昏迷评分(GCS)评分、患者的有效诊断、事件发生的位置和患者的年龄。疼痛严重程度的可能性与患者的运输状态、GCS评分和患者年龄密切相关。我们将缺失数据作为一个单独的类别处理,并发现结果与缺失数据之间存在一致的关联。我们还发现,在没有正式疼痛评分评估记录的病例中,疼痛是大约15%的症状。数据显示常规收集的变量与疼痛记录的可能性和疼痛严重程度之间存在关联。我们的发现也证明了缺失数据的影响。为了减轻缺失数据的影响,我们建议EMS机构考虑将疼痛评分评估作为每个患者报告的强制性要求。我们还建议服务机构在衡量临床表现时报告缺失数据的程度和影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Factors associated with pain reporting and severity of pain in the prehospital setting
An effective pain management strategy requires understanding of the epidemiology of pain in the population of interest and accurate measurement upon which to base quality improvement plans. The aims of this study were to estimate the incidence of pain in the prehospital setting and to explore features that impact on (1) documentation of pain; (2) severity of pain reported by patients. This retrospective cohort study included 212,401 care episodes attended by National Ambulance Service practitioners during 2020. Descriptive analysis of patient and care episode characteristics and regression analyses for the outcomes pain recorded and severity of pain were performed. We also used text pattern-matching of the notes field to estimate the proportion of patients in pain for whom a pain score assessment had not been documented. Sixty-five percent of all patients had a pain score documented and 29.5% were in pain (11% in severe pain). Likelihood of pain being recorded was most strongly associated with: Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) Score, working diagnosis of the patient, location of the incident, and patient age. Likelihood of pain severity was most strongly associated with: transport status of patient, GCS score, and patient age. We treated missing data as a separate category and found consistent associations between the outcomes and missing data. We also found that pain was a symptom in approximately 15% of cases where no formal pain score assessment was documented. The data showed associations between routinely collected variables and the likelihood of pain recording and pain severity. Our findings also demonstrate the impact of missing data. To mitigate missing data impact, we suggest that EMS agencies consider making pain score assessment a mandatory requirement of their reporting for every patient. We also recommend that services report the extent and impact of missing data when measuring clinical performance.
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来源期刊
Australasian Journal of Paramedicine
Australasian Journal of Paramedicine Health Professions-Emergency Medical Services
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0.00%
发文量
17
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