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Reducing the Pain of Intravenous Injections in Preschool Children.

Authors :
Ming-Ying Li
Chia-Wen Yu
Ya-Chun Yang
Chun-Chu Chang
Source :
Journal of Nursing; Apr2014 Supplement, Vol. 61, pS68-S75, 8p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background & Problems: Peripheral intravenous catheter insertion is a significant source of stress for preschoolers during hospitalization. An average of about 85% of pediatric patients at our general pediatric unit are preschoolers. An average 71% of these exhibit severe pain-related behavior during intravenous insertions. The factors influencing this pain experience may include inappropriate administration of analgesics by nurses, non-pharmacologic pain management, and inappropriate clinical settings. Purpose: This project worked to develop a strategy to reduce the incidence of severe injection pain in preschool children from 71.0% to 36.0% and to achieve a capacity improvement target of 50%. Resolutions: We implemented the following: 1) arranged a relevant training program for pediatric nurses; 2) revised hospital standards for pediatric intravenous insertions; and 3) enhanced analgesic administration and non-pharmacologic pain management through creating child-friendly clinical settings and providing interactive toys. Results: After implementing the abovementioned interventions, the incidence of severe pain-related behavior in pediatric patients decreased from 71.0% to 19.7%, a result that greatly exceeded expectations. Conclusions: This project demonstrated an effective approach to reducing severe intravenous-insertion pain in pre-schoolers and increasing pediatric care quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
Chinese
ISSN :
0047262X
Volume :
61
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Nursing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
95409727
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6224/JN.61.2S.68