Nurses' perception of pediatric pain and pain assessment in the Japanese PICU

Author:

Tsuboi Kaoru1ORCID,Tsuboi Norihiko1,Yamashita Kana2,Nakagawa Satoshi1,Yotani Nobuyuki3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Critical Care and Anesthesia National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Nursing National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

3. Division of Palliative Medicine National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackground: Nurses play an essential role in pain management in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). However, their perceptions regarding pediatric pain and current practice of pain assessment in Japanese PICUs remain unknown.Methods: In January 2021, we conducted a multicenter, cross‐sectional survey across 35 PICUs in Japan. A structured questionnaire which focused on nurses' perceptions of pediatric pain and pain assessment was developed, pilot‐tested, and revised. Twenty copies of the questionnaire were sent to each institution and were distributed to the nursing staff.Results: A total of 356 nurses from 22 institutions responded. Median age of the respondents was 33 years and 84.6% were female. Median length of nursing experience and PICU experience were 10 and 4 years, respectively. Use of pain scales for assessing pain in children who can self‐report pain, preverbal children, and children unable to self‐report pain due to cognitive impairment were 90.7%, 55.9%, and 50.0%, respectively. Nurses' satisfaction regarding pain management in their PICU was 31.9% and their confidence in pain assessment and management were 32.6% and 44.9%, respectively. Lack of knowledge (95.8%), difficulty assessing pain in children (95.2%), and delay in physician's action (91.8%) were the most perceived barriers to optimal pain management.Conclusions: The use of pain scales is insufficient and nurses' satisfaction proved to be extremely low in the Japanese PICUs. Substantial effort is required to enhance the level of current pain management and improve outcomes.

Funder

National Center for Child Health and Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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