Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Pain Assessment ผูช ้ ว่ ยศาสตราจารย์แพทย์หญิงลักษมี ชาญเวชช์ โรงพยาบาลวัฒโนสถ ศูนย์การแพทย์โรงพยาบาลกรุงเทพ งานประชุมโรงพยาบาลพระจอมเกล้าฯ เพชรบุรี 10 มีนาคม 2551 Objective • • • • Important of pain assessment Barriers in pain assessment Standards of pain management Tools for pain measurement How is the assessment of pain important? Pain • “…whatever the experiencing person says it is, existing whenever s/he says it does” • A subjective experience so we should have self reporting as a reliable indicator • McCaffery M. 1968 Pain • An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage • Pain is a complex experience that includes multiple dimensions (sensory, affective, cognitive) International association for the study of pain® 1979 Pain Assessment: Goals • • • • Characterize the pain Identify pain syndrome Infer pathophysiology Evaluate physical and psychosocial comorbidities • Assess degree and nature of disability • Develop a therapeutic strategy Characteristics of Nociceptive Pain Characteristics of Neuropathic Pain Characteristics of Neuropathic Pain Pain Syndromes • Acute pain • Chronic pain • Breakthrough pain • Recent onset, transient, identifiable cause • Persistent or recurrent pain, beyond usual course of acute illness or injury • Transient pain, severe or excruciating, over baseline of moderate pain Identify Pain Syndromes • Syndrome identification can direct assessment and predict treatment efficacy • Cancer pain syndromes • • • • Bone pain Pathologic fracture Cord compression Bowel obstruction • Noncancer-related pain syndromes • • • • Atypical facial pain Failed low-back syndrome Chronic tension headache Chronic pelvic pain of unknown etiology Barriers to appropriate of pain assessment • Clinician • Patient • System Clinician-Related Barriers to Pain Assessment • Lack of pain training in medical school • Insufficient knowledge • Lack of pain-assessment skills • Rigidity or timidity in prescribing practices • Fear of regulatory oversight Patient-Related Barriers to Pain Assessment • Reluctance to report pain • Reluctance to take opioid drugs • Poor adherence System-Related Barriers to Pain Assessment • Low priority given to symptom control • Unavailability of opioid analgesics • Inaccessibility of specialized care • Lack of insurance coverage for outpatient pain medication Pain Assessment Standard • Pain as the fifth vital sign • Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) • Should be documented: flow sheet The Pain as the 5th Vital Sign • In 1996, the American Pain Society (APS) introduced the phrase “pain as the 5th vital sign.” • Pain assessment is as important as assessment of the standard four vital signs and that clinicians need to take action when patients report pain • A concept for pain assessment • More or less frequent assessment may be appropriate Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) • 6 standards for pain management • Apply to all patients in healthcare facilities • Implementation of strategies required in 2001 to continue accreditation – Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals 1999: www.jcaho.org JCAHO Standards… cont • Recognition of the right of the individual to appropriate assessment and management of pain • Assessment of pain, and also the nature and intensity of pain, in all patients • Establishment of policies and procedures that support the appropriate prescribing of effective pain medications JCAHO Standards… cont • Education of patients and their families about effective pain management • Addressing of the needs of the individual for symptom management in the discharge planning process • Integration of pain management into the organization’s performance measurement and improvement program Patients Rights As a patient in this hospital, you can expect: • To receive information about pain and pain relief measures • Treatment by concerned staff committed to pain prevention and management • A quick response to your reports of pain • Your reports of pain will be believed • State-of-the-art pain management • Dedicated pain relief specialists Patient Responsibilities As a patient in this hospital, you are expected to: • Ask you health care providers what to expect regarding pain and its management • Discuss pain relief option with doctors and nurses • Work with healthcare providers to develop pain management plans • Report pain when it first begins • Help healthcare providers measure pain at all stages of your care • Tell healthcare providers if pain is not relieved Initial Assessment of Pain • Standard pain intensity tool throughout the hospital (> 1 if pediatric and adult populations: Wong-Baker smile/frown, visual analogue, 1-10 scale) • Displayed at bedside • Regular charting of pain as the 5th vital sign • Standardized assessment sheets to document effects and treatment of complications • Develop trigger for review of pain management plan (e.g >4 pain or side effect such as respiratory depression) Comprehensive Pain Assessment • History • Physical examination • Appropriate laboratory and radiologic tests Pain History • Temporal features—onset, duration, course, pattern • Intensity—average, least, worst, and current pain • Location—focal, multifocal, generalized, referred, superficial, deep • Quality—aching, throbbing, stabbing, burning • Exacerbating/alleviating factors—position, activity, weight bearing, cutaneous stimulation Characteristics for the Pain Type Location and distribution • Localized pain: – pain confined to site of distribution origin (e.g., cutaneous pain, some visceral pain, arthritis) • Referred pain: – pain that is referred to a distant structure (e.g., visceral pain such as angina, appendicitis) • Projected (transmitted) pain: – pain transferred along the course of a nerve with a segmental distribution (e.g., herpes zoster) or a peripheral (e.g., trigeminal neuralgia) • Dermatomal patterns: – peripheral neuropathic pain • Nondermatomal: – central neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia • No recognizable pattern: CRPS Characteristics for the Pain Type (cont.) Duration and periodicity • Brief flash: – quick pain such as a needle stick • Rhythmic pulses: – pulsating pain such as a migraine or toothache • Longer-duration rhythmic phase: – intestinal colic • Plateau pain: – pain that rises gradually or suddenly to a plateau where it remains for a prolonged period until resolution (e.g., angina) • Paroxysmal: – neuropathic pain • Continuously fluctuating pain: – musculoskeletal pain Characteristics for the Pain Type (cont.) Quality • Superficial somatic (cutaneous) pain: – sharp pricking or burning • Deep somatic pain: – dull or aching • Visceral pain: – dull aching or cramping • Neuropathic pain: – burning, shock-like, lancinating, jabbing, squeezing, aching Characteristics for the Pain Type Associated signs and symptoms • Visceral pain: – “sickening feeling,”nausea, vomiting, autonomic symptoms • Neuropathic pain: – hyperalgesia, allodynia • Complex regional pain syndrome: – hyperalgesia, hyperesthesia, allodynia, autonomic changes, and trophic Physical Examination of a Patient With Pain Physical Examination of a Patient With Pain Physical Examination of a Patient With Pain Diagnostic studies Tools for pain measurement •Unidimensional Pain Intensity Rating Pain Intensity Rating From Wong DL, Hockenberry-Eaton M, Wilson D, Winkelstein ML, Schwartz P: Wong’s Essentials of Pediatric Nursing, 6/e, St. Louis, 2001, P. 1301. Copyrighted by Mosby, Inc. Sample of Child’s FACES Pain Rating Scale Pain and Disability Nociception Disability Pain Other physical symptoms Physical impairment Neuropathic mechanisms Psychologic processes Social isolation Family distress Sense of loss or inadequacy Adapted with permission from Portenoy RK. Lancet. 1992;339:1026. •Multidimensional BPI Neuropathic Pain Scales Neuropathic Pain Scales (cont.) Neuropathic Pain Scales (cont.) Cries score Pain Assessment Techniques • In infants, behavior must be interpreted by using physiological and behavioral measures • CRIES is useful for neonates from 32 weeks to infants of up to 1 year • FLACC (full term neonate – 7 years) • Preschool children (ages 3 to 7) are in a transition group in which verbal abilities are developing. Frequency of re-assessment Acute setting of pain 1) within 30 minutes of parenteral drug administration, 2) within one hour of oral drug administration, 3) with each report of new or changed pain Conclusions • Important of pain assessment – Effective pain management • Standards of pain management – Patient rights – Hospital accreditaion • Tools for pain measurement – Simple and appropriate – Documentation Thank you