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Resumen de Improving Pain Relief in Elder Patients (I-PREP): An Emergency Department Education and Quality Intervention

Teresita M. Hogan, Michael Howell, John F. Cursio, Alexandra Wong, William Dale

  • Objectives To assess the effectiveness of a novel combined education and quality improvement (QI) program for management of pain in older adults in the emergency department (ED).

    Design Controlled pre/postintervention examination.

    Setting An academic urban ED seeing 60,000 adult visits annually.

    Participants Individuals aged 65 and older experiencing moderate to severe pain.

    Intervention Linked standardized education and continuous QI for multidisciplinary staff in an urban, academic ED from January 2012 to January 2014.

    Measurements Pain intensity, percentage receiving and time to pain assessment and reassessment, percentage receiving and time to delivery of analgesic.

    Results The percentage of participants with final pain score of 4 or less (out of 10) increased 47.5% (95% confidence interval (CI) = 41.8–53.2%). Median decrease in pain intensity improved significantly, from 0.0 to 5.0 points (P < .001). Median final pain score decreased from 7.0 to 4.0 points (P < .001). The percentage of participants with any pain improvement increased 43.7% (95% CI = 37.1–50.3%, P < .001). Pain reassessments increased significantly (from 51.9% to 82.5%, P < .001). The percentage receiving analgesics increased significantly (from 64.1% to 84.8%, P < .001). After the intervention, participants had 3.1 (95% CI = 2.1–4.4, P < .001) greater odds of receiving analgesics and 4.7 (95% CI = 3.5–6.5, P < .001) greater odds of documented pain reassessment.

    Conclusion The I-PREP intervention substantially improved pain management in older adults in the ED with moderate to severe musculoskeletal or abdominal pain. Significant reductions in pain intensity were achieved, the timing of pain assessments and reassessments was improved, and analgesics were delivered faster. Tightly linking education to targeted QI improved pain management of older adults in the ED.


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