Emergency Department Pain Management in Children With Appendicitis in a Biethnic Population
Our goal was to examine factors associated with the administration of emergency department analgesia (any analgesia, opioid analgesia) in patients with acute appendicitis in a tertiary children's hospital in Israel, and to examine ethnic differences. A retrospective cohort study of children eva...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Clinical journal of pain 2017-11, Vol.33 (11), p.1014-1018 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Our goal was to examine factors associated with the administration of emergency department analgesia (any analgesia, opioid analgesia) in patients with acute appendicitis in a tertiary children's hospital in Israel, and to examine ethnic differences.
A retrospective cohort study of children evaluated in the emergency department, who had International Classification Of Disease-Ninth Revision (ICD-9) diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Regression analysis was used to test the effect of multiple variables on the provision of analgesia. Medications were administered according to a nurse-driven pain protocol. Multivariate regression was performed to estimate the strength of association between ethnicity and provision of analgesia. The effect of patient-nurse ethnicity concordance was assessed.
During the 6-year study period, there were 715 children with acute appendicitis, 457 Jews and 258 Arabs. Overall, 289 (40.4%) received some form of analgesia, and 139 (19.4%) received opioid analgesia. Univariate analysis revealed that higher pain score (P |
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ISSN: | 0749-8047 1536-5409 |
DOI: | 10.1097/AJP.0000000000000485 |