Articles: adult.
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The assessment of pain in the emergency department (ED) is difficult but important for appropriate management of pain. Guidelines for the management of acute pain in the ED worldwide advocate using numeric rating scales such as the 0-10 pain score as tools to ensure consistency of documenting patient's pain, and this is mandated at initial assessment in many EDs. Studies of interventions to improve pain management in the ED indicate that whilst the inclusion of mandatory pain scoring within interventions may improve documentation of pain, there was mixed evidence as to whether this resulted in improvements in provision of analgesia. As part of a wider study looking at barriers and enablers to pain management in the ED, we explored how pain scoring was used in the ED. ⋯ The pain score appeared to have parallel but misaligned roles: to assess patient pain and ED staff practice. ED staff faced conflict between the need to record pain to ensure accountability of pain management, and recording pain to reflect the patient's report. The role of the pain score needs to be reviewed in order for pain scoring to improve the patient experience of pain management in the ED.
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Patient surveys and research have shown that Emergency Department attendees do not receive adequate analgesia. Pain monitoring has not been automated and usually involves a member of staff asking the patient to rate their score with no continuous record, often no specific place to record it and no automated alarm system for scores outside accepted parameters. Few patients have regular monitoring of their pain and our own preliminary research showed that over one week only 58% of patients with moderate to severe pain had a second or subsequent score recorded. ⋯ We aim to recruit 200 patients (100 per arm) from the emergency department at Leicester Royal Infirmary. All patients will use the display. This is a parallel group, two arm superiority trial with a 1:1 allocation ratio. Patients will be randomised to have their pain score on display (intervention) or hidden (control). Blinding is not possible. The display beeps every 15 min to remind patients to enter their pain score. Treatment will not be constrained by study protocol and will depend on the judgment of the treating clinician. The study will continue for up to 6 hours to allow time for the first dose of analgesia to wear off. Data collection will cease when the patient leaves the department. Questionnaires will be given to participants and the staff nursing them.
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A 'whole body' or 'pan-scan' computed tomography (CT) imaging approach is now becoming the standard of care during the early management of adult patients with suspected severe blunt multitrauma. A number of studies have variously reported a mortality benefit or no benefit from a pan-scan approach compared to that of carrying out body region-focused CT and/or plain radiographs or a mixture of imaging modalities. However, unanswered questions still remain due to the significant heterogeneity in practice between institutions, and the limitations of published studies. The potential risk for harm from ionising radiation or intravenous contrast-induced nephropathy is still a concern, especially where mortality benefit from an unselective pan-scan approach is yet to be definitively proven.We present the results of our latest analysis of the Trauma Audit and Research Network (TARN) database; updated to take into account the establishment of the regional trauma network system and focusing on the Major Trauma Centre's (MTC's). ⋯ The results of our investigation demonstrate that there is no risk adjusted mortality benefit observed from current practice in MTCs in England and Wales. Key issues remain to be addressed such as pan-scan selection criteria and the significant heterogeneity observed in practice across institutions.
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In February 2012, the Commission on Human Medicines recommended lowering the paracetamol toxicity treatment threshold for all patients. Children between one month and six years of age are physiologically distinct and metabolise paracetamol differently, making them less prone to toxicity. Furthermore, overdose in early childhood is almost exclusively accidental, as opposed to predominately deliberate self harm seen in adults and adolescents. As a result, the use of the new 75 mg/kg ingestion threshold for young children would appear to be of unproven benefit, and is substantially lower than the threshold used in other countries. ⋯ This retrospective study supports the hypothesis that accidental paracetamol ingestions less than 150 mg/kg, in children one month to six years of age, can be safely managed without investigation or treatment, in accordance with other international guidance. The use of 150 mg/kg threshold would reduce testing in over a third of attendances in our cohort. Study limitations include retrospective bias and the predominate use of serum paracetamol levels to determine toxicity.
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Nearly half a million people are killed each year as a consequence of intentional injury and many more seriously injured. Information sharing by Emergency Departments with local government for crime prevention purposes has previously been described as an effective, cost effective, low cost and low risk intervention for tackling community violence. The UK Department of Health and the Home Office support this process known as the Information Sharing to Tackle Violence (ISTV) program. In 2007, we implemented ISTV and have witnessed a substantial reduction in assault related attendances. We aimed to examine the epidemiology of our assault victims over the introduction period. We hypothesised a priori that there would be reductions in the proportions of patients who attended at the weekend and late at night, reductions in the proportions of young adult males, and reductions in the more seriously injured patients. ⋯ The ISTV program in this single ED has been associated with substantial reductions in violence related presentations. This effect is most marked in presentations at the weekend, younger patients and in those who appear to be least seriously injured.