Articles: postoperative-pain.
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Multicenter Study
Rhetoric and reality on acute pain services in the UK: a national postal questionnaire survey.
The study aimed to explore the extent to which NHS acute pain services (APSs) have been established in accordance with national guidance, and to assess the degree to which clinicians in acute pain management believe that these services are fulfilling their role. ⋯ More than a decade since the 1990 report Pain after Surgery, national coverage of comprehensive acute pain services is still far from being achieved. Despite wide consensus about the problems, concrete solutions are proving hard to implement. There is strong support for a two-fold response: securing greater political commitment to pain services and using organizational approaches to address current deficits.
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Same-day surgeries are becoming routine for many surgical procedures. However, the degree to which patients need help with pain management at home following laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC), shoulder, or hand ambulatory day surgery has received minimal examination. This study examined pain and related interference, analgesic use and adverse events, complications and resources utilized, and adequacy of postdischarge information at four time periods. ⋯ Despite the considerable pain reported across all time periods, analgesic use and other interventions were minimal. Adverse events, which were problematic for some, may explain why patients stopped analgesics despite pain. These data support further research on more effective pain interventions and related education for day-surgery patients after discharge.
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Comparative Study
Lessons learned from a multiple-dose post-operative analgesic trial.
Patients undergoing major surgery often require several days of post-operative analgesic management. However, little data are available on the course of post-operative pain during this period. Such data would be extremely helpful in planning treatment, formulating pain management guidelines, and determining how to construct multiple-dose post-operative analgesic clinical trials. ⋯ Only 9% of patients reported experiencing moderate-to-severe pain approximately 2 weeks later, at the end of the study. Describing pain as mild, moderate, or severe could be a simple, meaningful clinical trial outcome measure. Because most patients experience only mild pain 6 days after surgery, long-term clinical trials of post-operative pain control may be more efficient and cost-effective if they focus on the subset of patients with persistent moderate or severe pain.
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To analyze, from a societal perspective, the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of acute pain management after inception of a nurse-based Acute Pain Service (APS) in a general hospital. ⋯ A hospital-wide, comprehensive, postoperative pain management program provides an overall positive result for the health care system by improving postoperative pain and morbidity. This service is cost-effective, costing 19 EURO per patient per day. A cost-utility analysis for short-term assessment of quality of life showed no benefit in determining usefulness of such a pain management program.
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Letter Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The intravenous administration of ketoprofene: a suitable alternative for acute postoperative pain management in developing countries.