Procedural pain in a paediatric surgical emergency unit
- 1 December 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Paediatrica
- Vol. 84 (12) , 1403-1408
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1651-2227.1995.tb13577.x
Abstract
Pain induced by various types of procedures was assessed in the Paediatric Surgical Emergency Department at St Göran's Children's Hospital in Stockholm. Assessments of pain were obtained from the nurse, the parent, and children over 10 years of age by means of a visual analogue scale. In children aged 3-9 years, the Smiley Five-Face Scale was used. The nurse and the parent also answered questionnaires about analgesic medication, the child's behaviour, and the parent's overall opinion of the pain management, etc. Irrigation of the glans penis because of balanitis, treatment of fractures and paronychia were considered to be the most painful procedures. Forty-four per cent of the children cried during the procedure and 16% fought against being restrained. In 24% of the cases, the child was judged to be in a state of "panic". In conclusion, we believe that the pain induced by procedures in the emergency rooms is unacceptably high. Children estimate higher pain scores than parents and nurses do. There was a poor correlation between the parent's and child's estimates of pain. Parents are not well informed about the possibilities for pain treatment. Infants and children attending emergency rooms must also benefit from recent advances in the treatment of pain.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assessment of acute pediatric pain: do child self-report, parent ratings, and nurse ratings measure the same phenomenon?Pain, 1992
- Discordance between self-report and behavioral pain measures in children aged 3–7 years after surgeryJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1990
- Analgesic use in the emergency departmentAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1990
- Comparisons between patients' and nurses' assessment of pain and medication efficacy in severe burn injuriesPain, 1990
- Perioperative pain management in children: A reviewJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1989
- Managing pain in the pediatric emergency departmentPediatric Emergency Care, 1989
- Nitrous oxide analgesia in a pediatric emergency departmentAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1989
- Quality assurance in the emergency departmentAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1985
- Nitrous oxide sedation/analgesia in emergency medicineAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1985