Articles: pain-management.
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Fifty million American adults have chronic pain, and nearly 20 million have high-impact, or disabling, chronic pain, with higher prevalence associated with advancing age. Patient-centered pain management has been cited as a national priority to ensure that patient values and preferences guide clinical decisions. However, explicit, and practical strategies for implementing patient-centered pain management have not been disseminated. ⋯ Patients emphasized their desire for a provider that listens, genuinely cares, and sees them holistically to provide the best individual and tailored care for them. Providers focused on setting realistic expectations, vocalizing the significance of pain education at a young age, and balancing patient satisfaction and opioid prescriptions. While patients can be empowered to self-manage their chronic pain due to patient-centered pain care, provider mental exhaustion and mistrust of providers among patients resulted from suboptimal pain management.
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Previous research demonstrated that administration of Morphine Sulfate Immediate Release (MSIR) results in similar analgesic efficacy to Oxycodone but with significantly lesser degrees of euphoria and reward. The purpose of this study sit to investigate if MSIR combined with Acetaminophen can serve as an opioid analgesic alternative to Oxycodone combined with acetaminophen (Percocet) for acute pain in the Emergency Department (ED). ⋯ MSIR provides similar analgesic efficacy as Percocet for short-term pain relief in the ED, similar rates of nausea/vomiting, and lower rates of likeability of the drug.
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The opioid epidemic has stimulated initiatives to reduce the number of unnecessary narcotic prescriptions. We adopted an opt-in prescription system for patients undergoing ambulatory cervical endocrine surgery (CES). We hypothesized that empowering patients to decide whether or not to receive narcotics for pain control would result in fewer unnecessary opioid prescriptions. ⋯ By empowering patients undergoing ambulatory CES to accept or decline a prescription, we reduced the number of prescribed narcotic tablets by 96.6%. Although longer incisions and prior substance abuse predict higher likelihood of requesting pain medication on discharge, 207 of 216 patients were treated with acetaminophen alone.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Aug 2021
To relieve pain or avoid opioid-related risk? A comparison of parents' analgesic trade-off preferences and decision-making in 2019 versus 2013 in a single U.S. pediatric hospital.
Analgesic trade-off preferences, or the relative preference for pain relief vs. risk aversion, shape parents' decisions to give prescription opioids to their children. These preferences may be influenced by personal experiences and societal factors. ⋯ Findings suggest that parents of children scheduled for painful surgery at our pediatric hospital have become more analgesic risk-averse during the past decade. Parents' analgesic trade-off preferences may influence their decisions to administer prescribed opioids after surgery, which may contribute to children's pain outcomes.
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This American Head and Neck Society (AHNS) consensus statement focuses on evidence-based comprehensive pain management practices for thyroid and parathyroid surgery. Overutilization of opioids for postoperative pain management is a major contributing factor to the opioid addiction epidemic however evidence-based guidelines for pain management after routine head and neck endocrine procedures are lacking. ⋯ This expert consensus provides evidence-based recommendations for effective postoperative pain management following head and neck endocrine procedures with a focus on limiting unnecessary use of opioid analgesics.