Current pediatric pain practice in Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda, and Zambia: A prospective survey of anesthetists

Author:

Bhettay Anisa1ORCID,Gray Rebecca1ORCID,Desalu Ibironke2,Parker Romy3,Maswime Salome4

Affiliation:

1. Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, Division of Paediatric Anaesthesia, Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

2. Department of Anaesthesia University of Lagos, Lagos University Teaching Hospital Lagos Nigeria

3. Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine Groote Schuur Hospital and University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

4. Head of Division of Global Surgery University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundChildren in hospital experience significant pain, either inherent with their pathology, or caused by diagnostic/therapeutic procedures. Little is known about pediatric pain practices in sub‐Saharan Africa. This survey aimed to gain insight into current pain management practices among specialist physician anesthetists in four sub‐Saharan African countries.MethodsA survey was sent to 365 specialist physician anesthetists in Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda and Zambia. Content analysis included descriptive information about the respondents and their work environment. Thematic analysis considered resources available for pediatric pain management, personal and institutional pain practices.ResultsOne hundred and sixty‐six responses were received (response rate 45.5%), with data from 141 analyzed; Nigeria (27), South Africa (52), Uganda (41) and Zambia (21). Most respondents (71.83%) worked at tertiary/national referral hospitals. The majority of respondents (130/141, 91.55%) had received teaching in pediatric pain management. Good availability was reported for simple analgesia, opioids, ketamine, and local anesthetics. Just over half always/often had access to nurses trained in pediatric care, and infusion pumps for continuous drug delivery. Catheters for regional anesthesia techniques and for patient‐controlled analgesia were largely unavailable. Two thirds (94/141, 66.67%) did not have an institutional pediatric pain management guideline, but good pharmacological pain management practices were reported, in line with World Health Organization recommendations. Eighty‐eight respondents (62.41%) indicated that they felt appropriate pain control in children was always/often achieved in their setting.ConclusionThis survey provides insight into pediatric pain practices in these four countries. Good availability of a variety of analgesics, positive pain prescription practices, and utilization of some non‐pharmacological pain management strategies are encouraging, and suggest that achieving good pain control despite limited resources is attainable. Areas for improvement include the development of institutional guidelines, routine utilization of pain assessment tools, and access to regional anesthesia and other advanced pain management techniques.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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