European journal of pain : EJP
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Analgesia by telemedically supported paramedics compared with physician-administered analgesia: A prospective, interventional, multicentre trial.
In German emergency medical services (EMS), the analgesia is restricted to physicians. In this prospective, interventional, multicentre trial, complications with and quality of telemedically delegated analgesia were evaluated. ⋯ Telemedical delegation of analgesics to paramedics was safe and led to a pain reduction superior to the published minimum standard in both groups. The documentation quality was better in the telemedicine group. WHAT DOES THIS STUDY ADD?: Little is known about the safety and quality of prehospital analgesia carried out by emergency medical services (EMS). Beside potential quality problems, in some countries meaningful pain reduction is limited by legal regulations that allow only physicians to administer analgesics. This first multicentre prospective trial for telemedically delegated analgesia demonstrates that remote analgesia is possible and safe and retains equivalent analgesic quality compared with that administered by onsite EMS physicians.
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Algoplus detects acute pain in non-verbal old patients (NVOP) with good psychometric properties. However, depression or dementia might modify the Algoplus score and/or item expression. Algoplus performances on demented and/or depressed old populations were tested. ⋯ Algoplus accurately detected pain in depressed and/or dementia patients; and was sensitive to change after pain treatment. WHAT DOES THIS STUDY ADD?: Algoplus accurately detects pain in depressed and/or demented patients. A cut-off score of 2 accurately detects the need for pain management in these populations. Algoplus is sensitive to change after treating pain.