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Pediatric emergency care · Sep 2021
Socioeconomic Status and Analgesia Provision at Discharge Among Children With Long-Bone Fractures Requiring Emergency Care.
- Henry W Ortega, Heidi Vander Velden, Walter Truong, and Joseph L Arms.
- From the Emergency Services.
- Pediatr Emerg Care. 2021 Sep 1; 37 (9): 456461456-461.
BackgroundInadequate treatment of painful conditions in children is a significant and complex problem. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of socioeconomic status on the provision of analgesic medicines at discharge in children treated emergently for a long-bone fracture.MethodsA retrospective review of all patients during a 1-year period with a long-bone fracture treated in 2 urban pediatric emergency departments (EDs) was performed.ResultsEight hundred seventy-three patients were identified who met our inclusion criteria. Sixty percent of patients received a prescription for an opioid-containing medicine, and 22% received a prescription for an over-the-counter analgesic medicine at ED discharge. Socioeconomic status had no effect on opioid analgesic prescriptions at discharge. Patients in the lowest-income group were younger, presented to the ED longer after an injury, were likely nonwhite, and had higher rates of over-the-counter analgesic medicine prescriptions provided at discharge. Higher-income patients were likely white and non-Hispanic, presented to the ED sooner, and were less likely to receive a prescription for a nonopioid analgesic medicine.ConclusionsSocioeconomic status is associated with different nonopioid analgesic prescription patterns in children treated in the ED for a long-bone fracture, but had no effect on opioid analgesic prescriptions.Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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