L. Chan et al., PARENTAL PERCEPTION OF THE ADEQUACY OF PAIN CONTROL IN THEIR CHILD AFTER-DISCHARGE FROM THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT, Pediatric emergency care, 14(4), 1998, pp. 251-253
Objective: To determine how well the pain of pediatric patients who ar
e discharged from our emergency department (ED) Is managed. Design: Pr
ospective, observational case series conducted from 9/21/96 to 3/16/97
, Setting: University tertiary care ED with an annual pediatric census
of 11,000, consisting of a diverse racial and socioeconomic populatio
n. Patients: Children ages less than or equal to 15 years and discharg
ed from the ED with one of the preselected acute, painful, conditions
including fracture, corneal abrasion, ankle sprain with swelling, burn
, otitis media with pain at discharge, or exudative pharyngitis, Study
Protocol: At time of discharge from the ED, data collectors not invol
ved in the patients' care obtained consent from the patient's parent o
r guardian and completed data collection that included the final diagn
osis and any recommended analgesic. Physicians were blinded to patient
enrollment. Parents were phoned 48 hours after ED discharge and asked
if they believed their child's pain was adequately controlled at home
and if they had sought medical care elsewhere. Data were reported as
percentages, and confidence intervals (CI) were calculated. Results: F
rom a convenience sample of 75 patients, five could not be contacted,
leaving 70 for analysis. The mean age was 5.4 +/- 4.7 years. Sixty-sev
en parents (96%; 95% CI, 91-100%) believed their child's pain was well
controlled, and 67 patients (96%; 95% CI, 91-100%) received an analge
sic prescription. Five parents did not administer the prescribed analg
esic because they believed their child's pain was controlled without i
t. No parent sought further medical care for pain medication for their
child. Conclusions: Our pediatric pain management study showed high a
nalgesic use and high parental satisfaction, Lectures and bedside educ
ation may be a way to improve pain management in pediatric patients.