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- Megan J Greenough, Krystina B Lewis, Tracey Bucknall, Lindsay Jibb, Jennifer Leese, Christine Lamontagne, and Janet E Squires.
- From the University of Ottawa, School of Nursing; Chronic Pain Services at The Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, Canada. Electronic address: mgreenough@cheo.on.ca.
- Pain Manag Nurs. 2024 Apr 1; 25 (2): 170180170-180.
BackgroundInterdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs are ideal treatment settings for youth with chronic pain who are complex from a biopsychosocial perspective. There is currently no evidence-based clinical decision support to guide nurses triaging patients to such programs, which increases the risk for haphazard triage decisions.AimsTo explore and describe the decision-making practices of and contextual influences on nurses triaging patients to interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs.DesignA qualitative exploratory descriptive design.SettingsInterdisciplinary Pediatric Chronic Pain Programs.Participants/SubjectsIn all, 12 nurses across 11 different interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs participated in this study.MethodsIndividual, semi-structured interviews were conducted, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using concurrent content analysis, guided by the Cognitive Continuum Theory and the Theoretical Domains Framework.ResultsFindings focused on the complexity of the pediatric chronic pain population and the leading role nurses play in triage without evidence-based guidance. Analysis generated three prominent themes: (1) nurse-led triage determinants; (2) process of triage decision-making; and (3) external influences on triage decision-making.ConclusionsTriage decision making in the setting of interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs is complex and often led by nurses. There is a desire amongst nurses to adopt an evidence-based clinical decision support triage tool (CDS), which may streamline the referral and triage process and foster a system whereby patients in highest need for interdisciplinary care are best prioritized.Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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