Articles: analgesics.
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Multicenter Study
The influence of triage systems and triage scores on timeliness of ED analgesic administration.
The aim of the study was to examine the association between triage scoring systems and triage priority scores on time to initial emergency department (ED) analgesic administration. ⋯ Although there were some differences between triage systems, all sites and systems demonstrated unacceptably long times to analgesic provision. Many patients with moderate to severe pain received no analgesic during their ED stay. Future studies should examine whether ED overcrowding impacts timeliness of analgesic administration and identify specific strategies to improve pain management practices in this challenging environment.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
A comparison of observed versus documented physician assessment and treatment of pain: the physician record does not reflect the reality.
The Joint Commission requires "appropriate assessment" of patients presenting with painful conditions. Compliance is usually assessed through retrospective chart analysis. We investigate the discrepancy between observed physician pain assessment and that subsequently documented in the medical record. ⋯ Physicians almost always assess and treat patient pain but infrequently record those efforts. The patient's chart is a poor surrogate marker for pain assessment and care by emergency physicians and may not be suitable for use as a compliance assessment tool. Research methodology using retrospective chart analysis may be affected by this phenomenon, suggesting the potential for underestimation of patient pain assessment and treatment by emergency physicians.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Co-morbid pain and psychopathology in males and females admitted to treatment for opioid analgesic abuse.
The purpose of this study was to identify co-morbidity in a national sample (N=1408) of males and females entering treatment for opioid abuse. Our sample was primarily white, lived in small urban, suburban or rural locations (80%), and was well-educated. Chronic pain was a symptomatic feature in over 60% of all subjects. ⋯ Finally, most of the sample had sought treatment 3 or more times for substance abuse prior to the treatment admission in which the survey was completed. Physical and mental health were very poor in both male and female prescription opioid abusers, but females were more ill and dysfunctional than males in all physical and particularly emotional domains. Our results suggest that a small number of "at risk" opioid naive pain patients, who might abuse their therapeutically appropriate opioid analgesics, can be identified by assessing pre- and co-morbid substance abuse and significant psychopathology.
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Multicenter Study
[Post marketing surveillance study with an analgesic (transdermal buprenorphine patch) in patients with moderate to severe chronic pain].
To obtain information on the efficacy, tolerability and safetyofa transdermal buprenorphine patch (Transtec PRO) in patients with moderate to severe chronic pain. In addition it should be evaluated to what extent the two fixed patch change days per weekare simplifyingthe therapy. ⋯ The buprenorphine-containing matrix patch was effective and well tolerated in patients with moderate to severe chronic cancer and noncancer pain. From the physicians view the two fixed patch change days per week facilitate the guidance of therapy. In patients with advanced renal insufficiency a dose adjustment is not necessary.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Reducing wound pain in venous leg ulcers with Biatain Ibu: a randomized, controlled double-blind clinical investigation on the performance and safety.
Six out of 10 patients with chronic wounds suffer from persistent wound pain. A multinational and multicenter randomized double-blind clinical investigation of 122 patients compared two moist wound healing dressings: a nonadhesive foam dressing with ibuprofen (62 patients randomized to Biatain Ibu Nonadhesive Coloplast A/S) and a nonadhesive foam without ibuprofen (60 patients to Biatain Non-Adhesive-comparator). Patients were recruited from September 2005 to April 2006. ⋯ It was generally found that women reported less pain intensity than men, and pain intensity decreased with increasing age. In addition, pain intensity increased with initial pain intensity and increasing wound size. This study has demonstrated that the ibuprofen-foam dressing provided pain relief and reduced pain intensity without compromising healing or other safety parameters.