Assessment of the implementation of a nurse-initiated pain management protocol in the emergency department

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Abstract

Objectives: to assess the implementation of a nurse-initiated pain management protocol for patients triaged as semi-urgent, and its impact in pain intensity, in the Emergency Department. Methods: a prospective cohort study for adult patients with pain who had been triaged as semi-urgent and admitted to the hospital’s Emergency Department. Patients who received the intervention (pain-management protocol with analgesic administration) were compared to those who were managed using the conventional approach (physician evaluation prior to analgesic administration). Results: of the 185 patients included, 55 (30%) received the intervention, and 130 (70%) were managed conventionally. Patients in the intervention group were more likely to have taken pain medication in the 4 hours prior to admission, and reported higher levels of pain at admission and more significant reductions in pain level. Conclusions: despite low protocol adherence, the intervention resulted in higher reported pain relief.

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Dos Santos, M. B., Toscano, C. M., Batista, R. E. A., & Bohomol, E. (2021). Assessment of the implementation of a nurse-initiated pain management protocol in the emergency department. Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem, 74(3). https://doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2020-1303

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