Your Article Summary
Forget the DEA: Relieve Patients' Pain
Emergency Medicine News, 06/25/09
Scheck A - What's the most DEA-proof way to assess pain during those deadline-a-minute shifts in the ED? Research from emergency physicians suggests it is a combination of the physician and the pain scale. Many patients who show up at the ED in pain don't really want analgesia, and most of those who do get it. The fact that patients want to speak to emergency staff about their pain symptoms comes as no surprise. Research into pain has shown that sufferers' anxiety actually is reduced in the presence of the same white-coated medical professionals who make blood pressure spike in other kinds of patients. Patient emotions can be a significant contributing factor to perceived pain levels. The emergency physician can have a mitigating effect on it, simply by engaging in the art of conversation. Researchers have found that human interaction, particularly with a sympathetic authority, can cause a rapid decline in the worry factor, effectively dimming pain perception, at least in a substantial number of cases. Patients who are told about the probable cause of their pain, for example, such as what to expect from the medication, and who are given empathic advice in the process seem to benefit in self-described ways, such as declines in symptoms and episodes.
Related Articles
Correlates of Pain Intensity in Men and Women With Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis. Results of a National Survey: The French ARTHRIX Study
The Clinical Journal of Pain, 10/23/09
Relevance Score: 73%
The relationship between disease activity, sleep, psychiatric distress and pain sensitivity in rheumatoid arthritis: A cross-sectional study
Arthritis Research & Therapy, 11/03/09
Relevance Score: 72%
Patient perception of pain care in hospitals in the United States
Journal of Pain Research, 11/16/09
Relevance Score: 71%
Characteristics of patients with chronic pain accessing treatment with medical cannabis in Washington State
Journal of Opioid Management, 11/03/09
Relevance Score: 71%
Systematic Review of the Literature on Pain in Patients with Polytrauma Including Traumatic Brain Injury
Pain Medicine, 10/14/09
Relevance Score: 71%
Today in Pain Management...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
An Open Pilot Study Assessing the Benefits of Quetiapine for the Prevention of Migraine Refractory to the Combination of Atenolol, Nortriptyline, and Flunarizine
Pain Medicine, 12/10/09
Paracetamol versus ibuprofen: A randomized controlled trial of outpatient analgesia efficacy for paediatric acute limb fractures
Emergency Medicine Australasia, 12/09/09
Temporal characteristics of migraine-type headaches
Agri, 12/08/09

See Latest Articles