Prescription of analgesia in emergency medicine (POEM) secondary analysis: an observational multicentre comparison of pain relief provided to adults and children with an isolated limb fracture and/or dislocation

Author:

Wilson SarahORCID,Quinlan Jane,Beer Sally,Darwent Melanie,Dainty Jack R.,Sheehan James RobertORCID,Keating LizaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundAcute pain is a common reason for emergency department (ED) attendance. Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) pain management audits have shown national variation and room for improvement. Previous evidence suggests that children receive less satisfactory pain management than adults.MethodsPrescription of analgesia in emergency medicine is a cross-sectional observational study of consecutive patients presenting to 12 National Health Service EDs with an isolated long bone fracture and/or dislocation, and was carried out between 2015 and 2017. Using the recommendations in the RCEM Best Practice Guidelines, pain management in ED was assessed for differences of age (adults vs children) and hospital type (children’s vs all patients).ResultsFrom the total 8346 patients, 38% were children (median age 8 years). There was better adherence to the RCEM guidance for children than adults (24% (766/3196) vs 11% (579/5123)) for the combined outcome of timely assessment, pain score and appropriate analgesia. In addition, children were significantly more likely than adults to receive analgesia appropriate to the pain score (of those with a recorded pain score 67% (1168/1744) vs 52% (1238/2361)). Children’s hospitals performed much better across all reported outcomes compared with general hospitals.ConclusionsIn contrast to previous studies, children with a limb fracture/dislocation are more likely than adults to have a pain score documented and to receive appropriate analgesia. Unexpectedly, children’s EDs performed better than general EDs in relation to timely and appropriate analgesia but the reasons for this are not apparent from the present study.

Funder

Royal College of Emergency Medicine

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,General Medicine,Emergency Medicine

Reference10 articles.

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3. Royal College of Emergency Medicine . Pain in children best practice guideline 2017, 2017. Available: https://www.rcem.ac.uk/docs/RCEM Guidance/RCEM Pain in Children - Best Practice Guidance (REV Jul 2017).pdf [Accessed 2 Mar 2020].

4. Royal College of Emergency Medicine . Pain in children national audit report 2017-18. Available: https://www.rcem.ac.uk/docs/QI + Clinical Audit/Pain in Children 2017_18 National Report (Oct 2018).pdf [Accessed 2 Mar 2020].

5. Emergency department analgesia for fracture pain

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