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Clinical Practice Guideline
Panel Co-chairs: Daniel B. Carr, M.D., Massachusetts General Hospital's Division
of Pain
Management, and Ada Jacox, Ph.D., R.N., Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing.
Guideline Release Date: March 5, 1992.
In February 1992, AHCPR released a clinical practice guideline to help surgeons, nurses, and
anesthesiologists manage acute postoperative pain more effectively. The guideline was developed
by an
18-member private-sector panel of pain experts. The multidisciplinary panel reviewed the
research literature on
pain management to develop the scientific base for the guideline.
Acute Pain Management Guideline Contents (Summer 1994)
Introduction
Unrelieved pain causes suffering, can lead to other health
problems, and delays
recovery, thereby adding unnecessarily to health care costs. The acute pain management guideline
had four
major goals:
- To reduce the incidence and severity of acute postoperative or posttraumatic pain.
- To educate patients about the need to communicate about their unrelieved pain.
- To enhance patient comfort and satisfaction.
- To reduce postoperative complications and, in some cases, shorten stays after surgical
procedures.
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Findings
After analyzing the results of more than 7,000 published studies, the panel concluded the
following:
- Half of all patients given conventional therapy for their pain—most of the 23 million
surgical cases each year—do
not get adequate relief. These patients continue to feel moderate to severe pain.
- Giving patients pain medicine only "as needed" can result in prolonged delays because patients
may delay
asking for help.
- Aggressive prevention of pain is better than treatment because, once established, pain is more
difficult to suppress.
- Patients have a right to treatment that includes prevention of or adequate relief from pain.
Physicians need to develop
pain control plans before surgery and inform the patient what to expect in terms of pain during
and after surgery.
- Fears of postsurgical addiction to opioids are generally groundless.
- Patient-controlled medication via infusion pumps is safe.
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Dissemination
Following release of the acute pain guideline at a press conference in Washington, D.C., news of
the guideline was carried nationwide by CBS, NBC, CNN, and Univision, a Spanish-language
network serving the United States and Latin America. Radio also carried the news.
The acute pain guideline release made the front pages of the New York Times, Wall
Street Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago
Tribune, Chicago Sun Times, Boston Globe, Detroit News, and other
major dailies. Other publications that have written about or mentioned the guideline include
Time magazine, U.S. News and World Report, Ladies Home Journal,
McCall's, Good Housekeeping, Family Circle, Working Mother,
Parenting, Consumers Report on Health, and the Bulletin of the American
Association of Retired Persons. This coverage helped put more than 645,000 patient versions of the guideline in the hands of consumers.
Physicians, nurses, and other health care professionals have been made aware of the pain
guideline through many means. They include popular and trade media, professional journals
(9 of which reprinted the guideline), AHCPR exhibits at professional meetings, and
dissemination through research reports in peer-reviewed journals and by professional societies
and hospitals. AHCPR mailed 20,000 copies of the guideline to the hospitals that are members
of the American Hospital Association, and to freestanding ambulatory surgery centers,
managed care organizations, national- and State-level medical and nursing societies, medical
and nursing schools, health insurance companies, peer review organizations, and other
organizations.
Dissemination Summary: Acute Pain Management Guideline
Presentations: | 44 |
Professional Articles: | 43 |
Health Industry Articles: | 42 |
Editorials/Mentions: | 135 |
Consumer Print: | 892 |
Consumer Broadcast: | 103 |
Total: | 1,259 |
Overall, AHCPR has disseminated nearly 2.4 million copies of the acute pain guideline (all
versions). The guideline has been translated into Spanish, French, Turkish, Hebrew, Chinese,
Korean, and other languages.
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Implications
It is too early to know if the acute pain guideline is improving pain management in the United
States, but the demand for the guideline has continued to be strong. Hospitals ordering copies
include:
- The University of California's Davis Medical Center ordered 1,000 copies for attending
physicians and incoming house staff. The hospital also gave copies to pharmacists and
nurses, and it encouraged them to discuss pain management issues with physicians. In
addition, a pain management committee was formed, and this group developed pain
monitors (standardized tools for measuring patients' pain and indicating the appropriate
intervention).
- The National Hospital for Orthopedics and Rehabilitation of Arlington, VA, ordered copies of
the pain
guideline and formed a pain management task force. According to the hospital's Director of
Professional
Services, several activities have been initiated with the help of the
guideline. These include designating appropriate pain medication for the day of surgery and
the day after, starting round-the-clock dosing (rather than as needed), training staff nurses to
recognize pain, and revising a form used by the physical therapy department to reflect
greater awareness of pain management.
- In Madison, the University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics distributed 700 copies of the
pain guideline's quick reference guide to attending surgeons and staff nurses. It also
assembled a 50-member multidisciplinary pain management team, incorporated pain
management techniques in some of the 75 critical paths developed and used by the hospital,
and carried out other activities inspired by the pain guideline.
To reflect important new research findings, AHCPR established a new panel to update the acute
pain guideline.
Nine other guidelines have been issued since the publication of the acute pain guideline.
Guidelines have been issued on urinary incontinence, pressure ulcers, cataract, depression, sickle
cell disease, early HIV infection, benign prostatic hyperplasia, management of cancer pain, and
unstable angina. Guidelines on other topics will be issued this year.
Return to Acute Pain Management Guideline Contents
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