Zaslansky Ruth, Chapman C Richard, Baumbach Philipp, Bytyqi Adem, Castro Lopes José M, Chetty Sean, Kopf Andreas, Li Li, Ern Ming Lim, Olawoye Olayinka, Rizza Parico Jane, Soyannwo Olaitan, Stamenkovic Dusica, Wang Hongwei, Meissner Winfried
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
Department of Anesthesiology, Pain Research Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.
Pain Rep. 2019 Jan 25;4(1):e705. doi: 10.1097/PR9.0000000000000705. eCollection 2019 Jan-Feb.
The burden of untreated postoperative pain is high.
This study assessed feasibility of using quality improvement (QI) tools to improve management of perioperative pain in hospitals in multiple developing countries.
The International Pain Registry and Developing Countries working groups, from the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP), sponsored the project and PAIN OUT, a QI and research network, coordinated it, and provided the research tools. The IASP published a call about the project on its website. Principal investigators (PIs) were responsible for implementing a preintervention and postintervention study in 1 to 2 surgical wards in their hospitals, and they were free to choose the QI intervention. Trained surveyors used standardized and validated web-based tools for collecting findings about perioperative pain management and patient reported outcomes (PROs). Four processes and PROs, independent of surgery type, assessed effectiveness of the interventions.
Forty-three providers responded to the call; 13 applications were selected; and PIs from 8 hospitals, in 14 wards, in 7 countries, completed the study. Interventions focused on teaching providers about pain management. Processes improved in 35% and PROs in 37.5% of wards.
The project proved useful on multiple levels. It offered PIs a framework and tools to perform QI work and findings to present to colleagues and administration. Management practices and PROs improved on some wards. Interpretation of change proved complex, site-dependent, and related to multiple factors. PAIN OUT gained experience coordinating a multicentre, international QI project. The IASP promoted research, education, and QI work.
术后未治疗疼痛的负担很重。
本研究评估了在多个发展中国家的医院中使用质量改进(QI)工具改善围手术期疼痛管理的可行性。
国际疼痛研究协会(IASP)的国际疼痛登记与发展中国家工作组赞助了该项目,QI与研究网络PAIN OUT进行协调并提供研究工具。IASP在其网站上发布了关于该项目的招募信息。主要研究者(PI)负责在其医院的1至2个外科病房开展干预前和干预后的研究,他们可自由选择QI干预措施。经过培训的调查员使用标准化且经过验证的基于网络的工具来收集围手术期疼痛管理及患者报告结局(PRO)的相关结果。四个与手术类型无关的流程和PRO用于评估干预措施的有效性。
43名提供者响应了招募;13份申请被选中;来自7个国家8家医院14个病房的PI完成了研究。干预措施主要集中于对提供者进行疼痛管理方面的培训。35%的病房流程得到改善,37.5%的病房PRO得到改善。
该项目在多个层面都被证明是有用的。它为PI提供了开展QI工作的框架和工具以及向同事和管理层展示的研究结果。一些病房的管理实践和PRO得到了改善。对变化的解读证明是复杂的、因地点而异且与多种因素相关。PAIN OUT在协调多中心国际QI项目方面积累了经验。IASP推动了研究、教育和QI工作。