Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- SECTION ONE OVERVIEW AND PRINCIPLES IN EMERGENCY ANALGESIA AND PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- SECTION TWO ANALGESIA FOR THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
- 8 Pharmacology of Commonly Utilized Analgesic Agents
- 9 Patient Assessment: Pain Scales and Observation in Clinical Practice
- 10 Pathways and Protocols for the Triage Patient with Acute Pain
- 11 Patients with Acute Pain: Patient Expectations and Desired Outcomes
- 12 Analgesia for the Adult and Pediatric Multitrauma Patient
- 13 Analgesia for the Emergency Department Isolated Orthopedic Extremity Trauma Patient
- 14 Analgesia for Selected Emergency Eye and Ear Patients
- 15 Analgesia for the Emergency Headache Patient
- 16 Analgesia for the Emergency Chest Pain Patient
- 17 Analgesia for the Emergency Back Pain Patient
- 18 Analgesia for the Acute Abdomen Patient
- 19 Analgesia for the Renal Colic Patient
- 20 Analgesia for the Biliary Colic Patient
- 21 Analgesia for the Chronic Pain Patient
- 22 Outpatient Analgesia following Acute Musculoskeletal Injury
- SECTION THREE PROCEDURAL SEDATION FOR THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
- SECTION FOUR TOPICAL, LOCAL, AND REGIONAL ANESTHESIA APPROACH TO THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
- SECTION FIVE SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR EMERGENCY PROCEDURAL SEDATION AND ANALGESIA
- Index
- Plate section
- References
22 - Outpatient Analgesia following Acute Musculoskeletal Injury
from SECTION TWO - ANALGESIA FOR THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- SECTION ONE OVERVIEW AND PRINCIPLES IN EMERGENCY ANALGESIA AND PROCEDURAL SEDATION
- SECTION TWO ANALGESIA FOR THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
- 8 Pharmacology of Commonly Utilized Analgesic Agents
- 9 Patient Assessment: Pain Scales and Observation in Clinical Practice
- 10 Pathways and Protocols for the Triage Patient with Acute Pain
- 11 Patients with Acute Pain: Patient Expectations and Desired Outcomes
- 12 Analgesia for the Adult and Pediatric Multitrauma Patient
- 13 Analgesia for the Emergency Department Isolated Orthopedic Extremity Trauma Patient
- 14 Analgesia for Selected Emergency Eye and Ear Patients
- 15 Analgesia for the Emergency Headache Patient
- 16 Analgesia for the Emergency Chest Pain Patient
- 17 Analgesia for the Emergency Back Pain Patient
- 18 Analgesia for the Acute Abdomen Patient
- 19 Analgesia for the Renal Colic Patient
- 20 Analgesia for the Biliary Colic Patient
- 21 Analgesia for the Chronic Pain Patient
- 22 Outpatient Analgesia following Acute Musculoskeletal Injury
- SECTION THREE PROCEDURAL SEDATION FOR THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
- SECTION FOUR TOPICAL, LOCAL, AND REGIONAL ANESTHESIA APPROACH TO THE EMERGENCY PATIENT
- SECTION FIVE SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR EMERGENCY PROCEDURAL SEDATION AND ANALGESIA
- Index
- Plate section
- References
Summary
SCOPE OF THE PROBLEM
Painful musculoskeletal injuries are undertreated in the emergency department (ED). The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations states that “unrelieved pain has adverse physical and psychological effect” and that pain should be “assessed in all patients.” Despite this, an analysis of the ED component of the National Center for Health Statistics National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey showed that only 59% of patients with orthopedic injuries had documented pain scores. Perhaps more concerning, in acute care patients with documented moderate or severe pain, analgesia has not historically been prescribed in as many as 25% of patients. This failure to address analgesic needs in adult patients is typically worse for pediatric patients with as many as 40% of children not receiving analgesic therapy for acute musculoskeletal injuries.
These findings have been replicated in many studies and indicate that analgesics are not routinely prescribed to patients with orthopedic injuries, even if they describe their pain as moderate to severe. In order to optimize analgesia for patients in all populations, it is essential for the medical provider to routinely identify, document, and treat the pain associated with injuries, particularly acute musculoskeletal injuries.
CLINICAL ASSESSMENT
The assessment of acute musculoskeletal injuries is generally straightforward. Unlike pain secondary to a medical event, the pain of orthopedic trauma can usually be readily identified.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Emergency Sedation and Pain Management , pp. 141 - 146Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008