Health Care Professionals’ Pain Narratives in Hospitalized Children’S Medical Records. Part 2: Structure and Content

Author:

Rashotte Judy1,Harrison Denise12,Coburn Geraldine3,Yamada Janet3,Stevens Bonnie J3,the CIHR Team in Children’s Pain

Affiliation:

1. Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario and University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

2. Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

3. The Hospital for Sick Children and The University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although clinical narratives – described as free-text notations – have been noted to be a source of patient information, no studies have examined the composition of pain narratives in hospitalized children’s medical records.OBJECTIVES: To describe the structure and content of health care professionals’ narratives related to hospitalized children’s acute pain.METHODS: All pain narratives documented during a 24 h period were collected from the medical records of 3822 children (0 to 18 years of age) hospitalized in 32 inpatient units in eight Canadian pediatric hospitals. A qualitative descriptive exploration using a content analysis approach was performed.RESULTS: Three major structural elements with their respective categories and subcategories were identified: information sources, including clinician, patient, parent, dual and unknown; compositional archetypes, including baseline pain status, intermittent pain updates, single events, pain summation and pain management plan; and content, including pain declaration, pain assessment, pain intervention and multidimensional elements of care.CONCLUSIONS: The present qualitative analysis revealed the multidimensionality of structure and content that was used to document hospitalized children’s acute pain. The findings have the potential to inform debate on whether the multidimensionality of pain narratives’ composition is a desirable feature of documentation and how narratives can be refined and improved. There is potential for further investigation into how health care professionals’ pain narratives could have a role in generating guidelines for best pain documentation practice beyond numerical representations of pain intensity.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neurology

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. A Quality Improvement Project on Pain Management at a Tertiary Pediatric Hospital;Canadian Journal of Nursing Research;2021-11-08

2. Considerations in Pediatric Inpatients;Guide to the Inpatient Pain Consult;2020

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