Articles: opioid-analgesics.
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Now that Texas prescribers must check a patient's history in the state's prescription monitoring program (PMP) before prescribing opioids, plus three other drug classes, the errors are becoming more apparent.
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All children with burn injuries experience pain at some time during their management and recovery. Burn pain is challenging to manage, owing to a combination of factors. The process of achieving adequate analgesia involves the correct scripting of medication based on the doctor's knowledge, the correct fulfilling of that script, and patient compliance. ⋯ Burn-injured children commonly receive inadequate analgesia in our setting. The reasons for this are multifactorial. The correct dose and the correct drugs for burn-related background pain are deficits in the knowledge of doctors who deal with this common problem. Furthermore, even if the correct drug and dose are prescribed, the correct volume of medication is often not issued by the pharmacy. This study highlights barriers to achieving adequate analgesia in children with burns being managed as outpatients. Potential strategies to overcome barriers include improving education with regard to pain management and burns at an undergraduate and postgraduate level, and improved supply chain management.