1. Electronic Monitoring in an Acute Pain Management Service.
- Author
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Goldstein, David H., Wilson, Rosemary, and VanDenKerkhof, Elizabeth G.
- Subjects
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PAIN management , *MEDICAL personnel , *WIRELESS communications , *MEDICAL care , *NAUSEA - Abstract
Objectives. This article will address the process involved in the development and implementation of a clinician-driven portable electronic chart on an Acute Pain Management Service (APMS). We describe the latest version of the program and provide 1 year of clinical data. Setting. Tertiary care center in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Patients. All patients admitted to the APMS between August 1, 2005, and July 31, 2006. Results. A total of 8,726 APMS visits were made to 2,528 patients. Mean length of stay on the Service was 2.3 days. Sixty-one percent of patients reported an active pain score >3/10. Pain scores were highest with hip or knee surgery. Thirty-five percent of patients reported nausea. Conclusions. Executive sponsorship, alignment with institutional priorities, and user input are essential to the development, implementation, adoption, and sustainability of an electronic patient record. Ready access to data at the bedside can improve quality of care, while ongoing, comprehensive data can contribute to Phase IV drug trials. Incorporating both clinical and research outcomes in the database improves data quality and usability, but must be balanced with the impact of clinical time constraints on documentation. Wireless technology and Tablet computers provide portability and adequate screen size for documentation and reviewing of patient data on an acute pain service. It is necessary to provide solutions to process issues, such as printing electronic records during the transition from paper to electronic records. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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