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Pediatric emergency care · Sep 2016
Comparative StudyAppendicitis and Analgesia in the Pediatric Emergency Department: Are We Adequately Controlling Pain?
- Kristen M Delaney, Alexis Pankow, Jeffrey R Avner, and Joni E Rabiner.
- From the *Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Jacobi Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx; †Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Bellevue Hospital/New York University School of Medicine, New York; and ‡Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital at Montefiore/Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY.
- Pediatr Emerg Care. 2016 Sep 1; 32 (9): 581-4.
ObjectivesThe primary objective of the study was to compare analgesia-prescribing practices and timing of analgesia administration between pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) and general emergency medicine (GEM) practitioners for children with appendicitis. The secondary objective was to compare analgesia administration versus triage pain score, pediatric appendicitis score (PAS), and body mass index (BMI).MethodsThis was a retrospective chart review of patients younger than 21 years who presented to either an urban pediatric emergency department (ED) or 2 general EDs and were diagnosed with appendicitis.ResultsTwo hundred eighteen charts were reviewed, 153 (70%) from the pediatric ED and 65 (30%) from the general EDs. The patients seen by PEM physicians were younger than the patients seen by GEM physicians (mean age, 12.8 vs 15.4 years; P = 0.002). The patients evaluated by GEM physicians were more likely to receive analgesia in the ED (82% vs 60%, P = 0.003) and received analgesia sooner (mean, 178 vs 239 minutes; P = 0.026) than the patients evaluated by PEM physicians. The patients with triage pain scores higher than 6 of 10 were more likely to receive analgesia than the patients with pain scores lower than 6 (71% vs 51%, P = 0.015). There was no association between PAS or BMI and analgesia administration or time to analgesia (P = not significant).ConclusionsThe patients with appendicitis evaluated by GEM physicians were more likely to receive analgesia and receive analgesia quicker than the patients evaluated by PEM physicians. The patients with higher pain scores were more likely to receive analgesia, but PAS and BMI did not affect analgesia administration.
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