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Pain relief in the recovery room: an audit of current practice and a proposed solution

Dr Mark Simmonds (Specialist Registrar in Anaesthesia, Department of Anaesthesia, Princess of Wales Hospital, Coity Road, Bridgend, Mid‐Glamorgan CF31 1RQ, Wales, UK)
Mrs Peggy Edwards (Sister in charge of the Recovery Unit, Department of Anaesthesia, Princess of Wales Hospital, Coity Road, Bridgend, Mid‐Glamorgan CF31 1RQ, Wales, UK)

Journal of Clinical Effectiveness

ISSN: 1361-5874

Article publication date: 1 March 1998

116

Abstract

For this study 334 patients during their stay in the recovery room were assigned to the following groups: ‘comfortable’, in ‘pain’ and in ‘severe pain’. Fourteen per cent of patients awoke from anaesthesia in ‘pain’ and 10% were discharged to the ward in ‘pain’. Thirty‐seven per cent of patients using patient‐controlled analgesia (PCA) in the recovery room were discharged in ‘pain’; 63% of these patients had neither been prescribed nor given a ‘loading dose’ in the recovery room. Forty‐eight per cent of patients receiving sole intramuscular opioid analgesia were discharged in ‘pain’. Ninety per cent who received nurse‐administered ‘prn’ intravenous bolus opioids were discharged ‘comfortable’. An algorithm was therefore developed for the administration of loading doses of intravenous opioids in the recovery unit to be used by recovery nursing staff prior to PCA or other analgesic methods. An early re‐audit established that the algorithm became widely adopted by anaesthetists, was safe and produced comparable discharge pain scores.

Citation

Simmonds, M. and Peggy Edwards, M. (1998), "Pain relief in the recovery room: an audit of current practice and a proposed solution", Journal of Clinical Effectiveness, Vol. 3 No. 3, pp. 122-127. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb020886

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1998, MCB UP Limited

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