1 / 108

From Pain to Comfort

From Pain to Comfort. Meg Beturne MSN,RN,CPAN,CAPA. Objectives. Define pain Discuss pain assessment and management utilizing ASPAN’s Clinical Practice Guideline Identify pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions Describe the challenge of chronic pain in perioperative areas

Download Presentation

From Pain to Comfort

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. From Pain to Comfort Meg Beturne MSN,RN,CPAN,CAPA

  2. Objectives • Define pain • Discuss pain assessment and management utilizing ASPAN’s Clinical Practice Guideline • Identify pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions • Describe the challenge of chronic pain in perioperative areas • Discuss comfort management

  3. PAIN DEFINED • Pain is usually a localized physical suffering associated with bodily disorder • Pain is one of the body’s most important protective mechanisms • Pain is a complex mechanism with unpleasant physical, emotional and cognitive components associated with actual or potential tissue damage

  4. Pain: The Sixth Vital Sign • Pain is “whatever the person experiencing it says it is, and existing whenever the person says it does”- Gold Standard • The patient is the ONLY one who can accurately describe his/her pain • It is subjective • All pain should be considered REAL • Pain can negatively affect the body McCafferty,2011

  5. Newest Insights • Definition of Pain refined: • Person’s inability to verbally communicate does not preclude the possibility that pain is present • Does not negate the responsibility of healthcare providers to treat it!

  6. Case Scenario • Example: 30 year old female SBO first day post-op; tells you she is in pain & is on phone talking. Do you still believe her? • YES! Pain is subjective and she is using distraction successfully which is a non-pharmacological way to manage pain • Since it is distracting her from the pain, you can now medicate her appropriately

  7. Pain Pathways • Nociceptors: give the body the ability to produce pain • Nerve endings present in skin, viscera, blood vessels, muscle, joints • Activated by noxious stimuli, leads to inflammation & release of bradykinin & prostaglandins • Pain impulses initiated by direct tissue damage and by release of chemicals • Pain travels very fast!

  8. Pain Conduction • Transduction: cutaneous nociceptors send impulses to spinal cord • Transmission: Impulses synapse either by fast or slow pain fibers • Perception: pain impulses processed by thalmus & cerebral cortex • Modulation: along the efferent fibers, pain may be inhibited or modulated

  9. Pain Threshold & Tolerance • Threshold: point at which stimulus is perceived as painful; fairly uniform person to person • Tolerance: maximum intensity of duration of pain a person is willing to endure before needing some intervention; this varies from person to person • Tolerance is not to be judged as acceptable or unacceptable by health care providers

  10. TYPES • Cutaneous: arises from superficial structures ( skin and subcutaneous areas) • Sharp, cutting, burning, throbbing, localized • Burn or paper cut • Deep Somatic: originates in deep body structures ( muscles, bones, tendons, joints) • Characterized as dull or diffuse • Muscle cramps

  11. MORE TYPES • Visceral: origin is in visceral organs • Deep, dull, poorly localized • Associated with nausea & vomiting, hypotension, weakness • Referred: perceived at a site different from its point of origin • Chest pain ( cardiac muscle doesn’t have pain receptors); pain can move to left arm, jaw • Gallbladder pain felt in the shoulder

  12. ACUTE PAIN • Acute: pain that extends until period of healing (less than 6 months), “temporary” • Identifiable cause • Occurs soon after injury • Onset sudden or slow • Intensity mild to severe • Autonomic response: BP,RR,HR increased; pupils dilated; diaphoresis, pallor, facial grimacing, restlessness, guarding behavior

  13. CHRONIC PAIN • Chronic: extends beyond (3-6 months) • May limit ADLs • May not have identifiable cause • Non protective ( serves no purpose) • May lead to depression, fatigue, insomnia, anorexia, apathy & learned helplessness • Autonomic response: BP,HR, RR, Pupils, skin are all normal • If severe & prolonged, PNS activated= muscle tension, HR & BP low, failure of body’s defenses

  14. Point of Emphasis • Physiological signs ( i. e. elevated blood pressure and elevated heart rate) are least sensitive indicators of pain, especially in chronic pain • Don’t withhold pain medication because of these changes alone

  15. CHRONIC- Two Types • Chronic Non-Malignant • Ongoing, lasting more than 6 months • NOT due to life threatening causes • NOT responding to currently available treatments • May continue for remainder of life • Low back pain, arthritis, neuralgia, Crohn's, migraines, peripheral neuropathy • Chronic Malignant • Cancer pain

  16. Chronic Pain in the Sexes • Conditions associated with chronic pain in women: Fibromyalgia, IBS, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Migraines; possible hormonal links; focus on emotional aspects; more likely to seek help than males; helpful to re-label pain as being manageable • Conditions associated with chronic pain in men: cluster headaches, gout, heart disease; focus on sensory aspects

  17. Chronic Pain, Surgical Patient • Require special consideration & planning for pain management :Methadone, Suboxone • Request consultation with acute pain service, anesthesia consultation • Continually communicated individualized pain management plan • Add, optimize first-line meds; rotate opioids • Educate patient to bring in chronic pain medications ( migraine, back pain) • Patient role in goal setting

  18. Other PAIN Terms • Breakthrough Pain: pain that increases above the pain addressed by the ongoing analgesics • Neuropathic Pain (Pathologic): arises from nervous system (peripheral or CNS)- has multiple mechanisms- shooting, sharp, electric • Discomfort: being uncomfortable in body or mind; mild distress • Suffering: feel pain/distress; sustain harm; injury, pain or death

  19. Sobering Statistics • 15% Americans with major trauma/surgery pain (45 million) • 25% Adults have chronic pain ( > 76 million) > diabetes, heart disease, cancer combined • 50% of inpatients/outpatients have pain • 30% patients give hospital low marks for pain control • Untreated/undertreated pain still common CDC (2007) Fast Facts

  20. The Truth About PAIN • Lack of expression does not equal lack of pain~ physiologic and behavioral adaptations to pain occur • Not ALL causes of pain are identifiable • Respiratory tolerance is rapid • Sleep is possible with pain but not good quality • Elderly experience pain but do not express it as much and so do babies! • Addiction is rare 0.1-0.3%

  21. Pain: A Perioperative Problem • Nearly all patients have postoperative pain 45million: 80% rate it moderate to severe • Pain is the most common reason for elective procedures • Fear of pain is the #1 reason for delaying elective surgery: reported by 59% pts. • 50% patients still have pain 1 year after surgery; 30% still have pain 10 years later! National Center Health Statistics,2006

  22. Patient Expectations • If pain is present: • A professional, comprehensive assessment • Individualized evaluation methods, consistent with age, condition and ability to understand • Treatment when present, or refer for treatment • Evaluation of effects of treatments

  23. Relief of Pain • “It is not the responsibility of patients to prove they are in pain; it is the nurse’s responsibility to accept the patient’s report of pain” ( American Pain Society, 2005) • “Relief of pain is a basic human right” (American Pain Foundation,2001) • “Relief of pain is a basic human right” (American Bar Association, 2000)

  24. Ethical Duty of the Nurse • Provide clinically competent, ethically defensible care • Duty to relieve pain, provide humane care • Suspected or known addiction disorder • Give opioids when clinically indicated & ordered • Protect patients/society from unauthorized opioid use • When ethical dilemmas exist, communicate them!

  25. Pain Assessment • Joint Commission Standards PC 01.02.07 Assess, Treat, Reassess, Document Pain • Identifying & treating pain is part of care • Must be assessed during rest and activity • Includes defining: • How patient gets screened • Who assesses pain & when it is reassessed • How pain data is collected & recorded • When in-depth evaluation is needed

  26. Joint Commission • Pain Management Standard • Patients and their families must be educated about pain management plan • Patients need to report pain • Patients need to cooperate with the prescribed treatment • Scope of standard: behavioral health, critical access, home care, hospitals, long-term care and ambulatory care

  27. BARRIERS to PAIN Assessment

  28. Patient Barriers • Fear, pessimism, catastrophizing • Pain, effects of drugs, death • Addiction to analgesics • Pain will be intolerable • Anxiety: Cured? • What post-op sensations are normal? • Unrealistic expectations • Interpretation of experience different than team: age, culture, background

  29. Professional Barriers • Mistaken beliefs about pain & treatment • Inconsistent assessment & reassessment • Systems barriers ( computers, access to resources) • Inadequate “handoff” communication • Biases, attitudes

  30. Other Barriers • Self-reports in pre-op are limited • Misunderstandings of pain scales • Over-reporting/underreporting of pain • When to assume pain is present/relieved? • Patients unable to report pain using usual self-report tools ( infants, unconscious, cognitively impaired, ventilated, impending death

  31. Pediatrics Behavioral Tool • Difficult to distinguish pain from fear • Rely on parent reports • Observe behaviors • Can use FLACC: Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability; 0-2 each with 10 being maximum; Behavioral score only, not intensity rating

  32. NIPS-Neonatal Infant Pain Scale • Facial expression, breathing, arms, legs, cry, state of arousal • CRIES: scale for neonatal 32 weeks to term; Cry, Requires Oxygen, Increased vitals, Expression, Sleeplessness

  33. CPOT • Critical Care Pain Observation Tool • 0-8 behavioral scale • 2 points for each category: • facial expression • body movements • muscle tension • ventilator tension or verbalization

  34. Cognitive Impaired • Assess at rest and activity • Insure functioning hearing aid • Have eyeglasses handy • Repeat questions and allow time for responses • Enlarged font helps • Self-report with descriptors, not numbers! • Consider behaviors: eating, sleeping, mood, body movement

  35. Special Considerations • Elderly: pain prevalence 2-fold higher >60 • Report of pain altered • Have acute & chronic painful diseases • Take many medications • Have multiple diseases • ^ sensitivity: therapeutic, toxic drug effects • Prone to constipation (opioids) • NSAIDs;> risk GI, renal, platelet problems • > Sensitivity to analgesic effects: higher peek effect, longer duration, dose titration

  36. Special Considerations • Known/suspected chemical dependency: • Experience variety of health problems • Possible withdrawal from opioid absence, causing > HR, restlessness, sleeplessness • Focus on managing PAIN , not detoxification! • Don’t forget non-drug interventions • Higher loading & maintenance doses of opioids may be required to reduce pain intensity

  37. ASPMN Position Statement • Pain Assessment in non verbal patients • When possible, obtain self-report • Look for possible pathologies, procedures or other causes of pain • Observe for behaviors that may indicate presence of pain • Obtain input from caretakers who know patient & usual behaviors & responses to pain • Use an analgesic trial & observe for changes in behavior

  38. ASPAN Clinical Guideline • Introduced in JOPAN in 2003, available now on ASPAN web site • Speaks to Assessment, Interventions and Expected Outcomes • Includes all phases of practice including: Preoperative Phase, Post Anesthesia Phase I, and Post Anesthesia Phase II or Extended Observation

  39. Assessment Begins With… • Pre-op Data: • Vital signs & comfort goals • Medical history • Pain history • Pain behaviors • Analgesic history • Patient’s preferences • Pain/comfort acceptable levels • Comfort history • Cultural, religious factors • Educational needs

  40. Interventions Begin in… • Pre-op: • Discuss pain & comfort assessment • Discuss with patient/family about reporting pain & available pain relief • Dispel misconceptions about pain & pain management • Encourage preventive approach • Educate purpose of meds & non-pharmacological measures • Discuss outcomes based on goals • Arrange for interpreter, signer as needed

  41. Outcomes to Strive For! • Pre-op • Patient states understanding of care plan • Patient states understanding of pain intensity scale, pain relief/comfort goals • Patient establishes realistic & achievable pain relief/comfort goals • Patient understands PCA equipment • Patient understands benefit of non-drug interventions

  42. Post anesthesia Phase I • Assessment: • Type of surgery, anesthesia technique, etc • Analgesics, etc given inter-op • Pain & comfort levels • Status/ vital signs: ABCD • Age, cognitive ability & cognitive learning method • ASSESSMENT DATA!

  43. Assessment Data • Subjective data: who, what, where, why & when are first clues of pain assessment • Objective data: observation of facial grimace, teeth clenching, frowning, moaning, crying • Physiological changes: increase BP, rise in HR, increase in RR are signs that support the patient’s subjective pain response

  44. Other Physiological Signs • Dilatation of pupils and/or wide opening of eyelids • Shivering • Change in skin and body temperature • Increased muscle tone • Sweating

  45. ASSESSMENT • Location: examine site • Intensity- use easy, fast, multicultural, multilingual pain scale: • Poker chip, Oucher scale • Visual Analog Scale: pt. places mark on line • Numeric Rating Scale: 0 to 10 • Wong Baker Faces Pain Scale: 3+ to adult • Behavioral Rating Scale • Body Diagram, Daily Diary • Verbal Descriptor Scale: no pain to worse pain

  46. Pain Rating Scales • Purpose: communication tool- here is where you are now and here is where we want you to be • Documenting ratings helps evaluate trends and treatment effectiveness • Know which scale is most appropriate to use ( i.e Wong-Baker preferred by African American children) • Important to have scales translated into languages of populations served

More Related