Pillay Shannon, Naicker Bavani, Ekambaram Kamlin
Division of Emergency Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Afr J Emerg Med. 2025 Dec;15(4):100897. doi: 10.1016/j.afjem.2025.100897. Epub 2025 Sep 4.
Despite advances in both pharmacological and non-pharmacological pain management, children remain vulnerable to oligoanalgesia. Understanding clinical practices and barriers encountered by treating clinicians is essential to inform targeted interventions. This study aimed to examine knowledge, attitudes and reported practices of doctors managing acute paediatric pain in rural regional hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
An electronic survey was distributed between January and February 2024 to doctors working in the departments of Emergency Medicine, Paediatrics, Surgery, and Orthopaedics at three regional hospitals. The survey included both closed- and open-ended questions addressing analgesic choices, awareness of clinical protocols, and perceived barriers to effective pain management. Descriptive statistics were used to summarise overall trends. Post hoc subgroup analyses were conducted using Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests. Odds ratios were calculated to describe significant associations.
Of 165 clinicians approached, 131 responded (response rate: 80%). Over half (55.7%) reported inadequate training for paediatric pain management, and only 42% were aware of departmental protocols. Paracetamol was the most commonly used analgesic agent. Key barriers included time constraints, limited drug access, and departmental culture. Awareness of departmental paediatric pain protocols was highest (82,9%) in Paediatrics (χ², p<0.001). Paediatric doctors reported significantly greater use of non-pharmacological methods across multiple conditions and procedures. Emergency Medicine respondents more frequently reported opioids for severe abdominal pain (OR=4.24, <0.001, 95% CI 1.96-9.14). Barriers varied by discipline. Paediatrics cited difficulties with pain assessment, while Orthopaedics primarily reported time and staffing constraints.
Paediatric pain remains common yet inadequately addressed in Southern Africa. This study identifies insufficient training, poor access to analgesia, and departmental practices as key barriers. Context-specific, cost-effective, multimodal strategies and tailored education are needed to improve care. Sustainable progress requires cultural change, better training, and interdisciplinary collaboration to ensure equitable pain management.
尽管在药物和非药物疼痛管理方面都取得了进展,但儿童仍然容易出现镇痛不足的情况。了解治疗临床医生所遇到的临床实践和障碍对于制定有针对性的干预措施至关重要。本研究旨在调查南非夸祖鲁 - 纳塔尔省农村地区医院中管理小儿急性疼痛的医生的知识、态度和报告的实践情况。
2024年1月至2月期间,向三家地区医院的急诊科、儿科、外科和骨科的医生发放了电子调查问卷。该调查包括封闭式和开放式问题,涉及镇痛选择、临床方案的知晓情况以及有效疼痛管理的感知障碍。使用描述性统计来总结总体趋势。采用卡方检验和费舍尔精确检验进行事后亚组分析。计算比值比以描述显著关联。
在165名接触的临床医生中,131人做出了回应(回应率:80%)。超过一半(55.7%)的人报告说小儿疼痛管理培训不足,只有42%的人知晓科室方案。对乙酰氨基酚是最常用的镇痛剂。主要障碍包括时间限制、药物获取有限和科室文化。儿科对科室小儿疼痛方案的知晓率最高(82.9%)(χ²,p<0.001)。儿科医生报告在多种病症和手术中更频繁地使用非药物方法。急诊科受访者更频繁地报告在严重腹痛时使用阿片类药物(OR = 4.24,<0.001,95% CI 1.96 - 9.14)。障碍因学科而异。儿科提到疼痛评估困难,而骨科主要报告时间和人员配备限制。
小儿疼痛在南部非洲仍然很常见,但处理不足。本研究确定培训不足、镇痛药物获取困难和科室实践是关键障碍。需要针对具体情况、具有成本效益的多模式策略和量身定制的教育来改善护理。可持续的进展需要文化变革、更好的培训和跨学科合作,以确保公平的疼痛管理。