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Matching Interventions to Barriers in Pain Management

Matching Interventions to Barriers in Pain Management. Ruth Cornish Program Manager. National Institute of Clinical Studies. Role: To improve health care by helping close important gaps between best available evidence and current clinical practice. What we know. What we do.

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Matching Interventions to Barriers in Pain Management

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  1. Matching Interventions to Barriers in Pain Management Ruth Cornish Program Manager

  2. National Institute of Clinical Studies Role: To improve health care by helping close important gaps betweenbest available evidence andcurrent clinical practice

  3. Whatweknow Whatwedo

  4. Acknowledgements • Prof. Sanchia Aranda • NICS advisors • Deb Gordon & June Dahl (Wisconsin pain group) • Pilot hospital teams

  5. Pilot hospitals Royal Brisbane Charles Gairdner Newcastle Mater Westmead Royal Perth FlindersRoyal Adelaide Peter Mac

  6. Background www.nicsl.com.au

  7. Aims • To improve the identification of patients with pain • To improve the day-to-day management of pain for patients with cancer • To integrate effective cancer pain management into the core business of hospitals

  8. Barriers - Institutional • Lack of institutional commitment • Poor visibility of the problem • Professional territorial issues • Unclear lines of responsibility • Lack of practical tools & policies

  9. Barriers – Clinicians • Attitudes & beliefs of staff • No routine pain assessment • Under-estimation of patients’ pain • Analgesia misconceptions • Prescribing & administration inconsistencies • Inadequate knowledge and education

  10. Barriers – Patients • Inevitability of pain • Stoicism • Analgesia fears & misconceptions • Being a “good” patient • Distracting from treatment • Trade-offs: analgesics & side effects

  11. Where to start?

  12. Matchinginterventions to barriers

  13. Lack of knowledge Educational courses Evidence based guidelines Decision aids Beliefs/Attitudes Peer influence Opinion leaders Lack of motivation Incentives / sanctions Perception-reality mismatch Audit & feedback Reminders Systems of care Process redesign Generic Principle

  14. Institutional • Lack of institutional commitment • Executive champions • Peer hospitals? • Poor visibility of the problem • Audit & feedback to executive • We have a problem!

  15. Institutional • Professional territorial issues • get everyone involved • multiple champions eg. Disciplines Nursing Medicine Pharmacy Quality/safety Departments Pain Palliative care Medical/Surgical Quality/safety

  16. Clinical • Inadequate knowledge, education • needs analyses useful • don’t expect attendance at special meetings • use existing meetings opportunistically • include in orientation, rounds, intranet • nursing competency standards

  17. Clinical • Attitudes and beliefs • Opinion leaders • Clinical champions • Peers

  18. Clinical • No routine assessment • documented pain scores on vital sign chart • reminders • audit & feedback essential

  19. Clinical • Prescribing inconsistencies • guidelines and decision aids at point of prescribing • equi-analgesia cards • standardised prescribing

  20. Patient • Inevitability of pain; stoicism; being a "good" patient • "your pain is important to us" • organisation mission statement • hospital admission/discharge information includes pain management • ward posters

  21. Patient • Distracting from treatment • "your pain is important to us" • involve patient in their own pain management • prompts to discussion

  22. Patient • Analgesia fears, misconceptions (particularly addiction) • starting morphine is a "threatening procedure" for cancer patients • information for patients & families

  23. Matchinginterventions to barriers

  24. Begins with a sound analysis of barriers

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