Department of Emergency Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Acad Emerg Med. 2020 Aug;27(8):742-752. doi: 10.1111/acem.13934. Epub 2020 Mar 9.
Patients with chronic noncancer pain (CNCP) present unique challenges to emergency department (ED) care providers and administrators. Their conditions lead to frequent ED visits for pain relief and symptom management and are often poorly addressed with costly, low-yield care. A systematic review has not been performed to inform the management of frequent ED utilizing patients with CNCP. Therefore, we synthesized the available evidence on interventional strategies to improve care-associated outcomes for this patient group.
We searched Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, CENTRAL, SCOPUS, and Web of Science from database inception to June 2018 for eligible interventional studies aimed at reducing frequent ED utilization among adult patients with CNCP. Articles were assessed in duplicate in accordance with methodologic recommendations from the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. Outcomes of interest were the frequency of subsequent ED visits, type and amount of opioids administered in the ED and prescribed at discharge, and costs. Methodologic quality was assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias in Non-Randomized Studies of Interventions and Risk of Bias tools for nonrandomized and randomized studies, respectively.
Thirteen studies including 1,679 patients met the inclusion criteria. Identified interventions implemented pain policies (n = 4), individualized care plans (n = 5), ED care coordination (n = 2), chronic pain management pathways (n = 1), and behavioral health interventions (n = 1). All of the studies reported a decrease in ED visit frequency following their respective interventions. These reductions were especially pronounced in studies whose interventions were focused around individualized care plans and primary care involvement. Interventions implementing opioid restriction and pain management policies were largely successful in reducing the amounts of opioid medications administered and prescribed in the ED.
Multifaceted interventions, especially those employing individualized care plans, can successfully reduce subsequent ED visits, ED opioid administration and prescription, and care-associated costs for frequent ED utilizing patients with CNCP.
慢性非癌痛(CNCP)患者给急诊科(ED)医护人员和管理人员带来了独特的挑战。他们的病情导致频繁到 ED 就诊以缓解疼痛和控制症状,但往往因成本高、收效低的治疗而无法得到有效缓解。目前尚未进行系统评价来为管理此类频繁到 ED 就诊的患者提供依据。因此,我们综合了现有的干预策略相关证据,以改善该患者群体的医疗护理结局。
我们从数据库建立开始,在 2018 年 6 月前,通过 Medline、EMBASE、CINAHL、CENTRAL、SCOPUS 和 Web of Science 检索了旨在减少成人 CNCP 患者频繁 ED 就诊的干预性研究。根据 Cochrane 干预措施系统评价手册的方法建议,对文章进行了独立的评估。我们关注的结局是随后 ED 就诊的频率、ED 内和出院时开具的阿片类药物的类型和数量以及成本。采用 Cochrane 非随机干预研究偏倚风险工具和非随机及随机研究偏倚风险工具评估方法学质量。
纳入了 13 项研究共 1679 名患者。确定的干预措施包括实施疼痛政策(n=4)、制定个体化护理计划(n=5)、ED 护理协调(n=2)、慢性疼痛管理途径(n=1)和行为健康干预(n=1)。所有研究均报告了干预后 ED 就诊频率降低。其中,干预措施侧重于个体化护理计划和初级保健参与的研究结果降幅更为显著。实施阿片类药物限制和疼痛管理政策的干预措施在很大程度上成功减少了 ED 内开具和开出的阿片类药物的数量。
多方面的干预措施,尤其是采用个体化护理计划的干预措施,可成功减少 CNCP 患者频繁到 ED 就诊、ED 内阿片类药物的使用和开具以及与护理相关的成本。