• BMC research notes · May 2020

    Managing acute pain in HIV+/AIDS patients: knowledge and practice trends among emergency physicians of major tertiary care centers of a developing country.

    • Aliya Ahmed, Gauhar Afshan, Irshad KhanRobynaRDepartment of Anaesthesiology, 2nd-Floor Private Wing, Aga Khan University, Stadium Road, P.O. Box 3500, Karachi, 74800, Pakistan., Badar Afzal, Seemin Jamali, Nighat Farooq, Sarosh Saleem, Rubaba Naeem, and Uzma Khan.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology, 2nd-Floor Private Wing, Aga Khan University, Stadium Road, P.O. Box 3500, Karachi, 74800, Pakistan. aliya.ahmed@aku.edu.
    • BMC Res Notes. 2020 May 26; 13 (1): 255.

    ObjectiveTo assess knowledge and practice trends in managing acute pain in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV+) or having acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) among emergency physicians of four tertiary care hospitals. Acute pain management in such patients is complex because of multiple concomitant painful conditions related to their disease. After obtaining ethical approval and written informed consent, emergency physicians were requested to fill out a questionnaire.ResultsOut of 84 physicians who participated, 49 had managed HIV+/AIDS patients during the preceding year. Out of the 49, 30 (61.2%) physicians stated that they used a combination of analgesics for acute pain in these patients. Forty-two (50%) out of the 84 participants believed that routine doses of opioids were adequate for pain relief, while 42 (50%) agreed that pain management was more complex in these patients mainly due to presence of multiple coexisting problems and psychological issues. Only 26 (31%) respondents considered that pain was under-reported and under-treated in these patients, mainly because physicians were more focused on patients' other disease related complications and issues. Formulation of guidelines are recommended for effective acute pain management in these patients encompassing associated issues, including concomitant painful conditions, opioid dependence, psychiatric problems, etc.

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