Challenges faced by nurses in managing pain in a critical care setting
Challenges faced by nurses in managing pain in a critical care setting
AIM: To explore nurses' challenges in managing pain among ill patients in critical care.
BACKGROUND: Pain can lead to many adverse medical consequences and providing pain relief is central to caring for ill patients. Effective pain management is vital since studies show patients admitted to critical care units still suffer from significant levels of acute pain. The effective delivery of care in clinical areas remains a challenge for nurses involved with care which is dynamic and constantly changing in critically ill.
DESIGN: Qualitative prospective exploratory design.
METHODS: This study employed semi structured interviews with nurses, using critical incident technique. Twenty-one nurses were selected from critical care settings from a large acute teaching health care trust in the UK. A critical incident interview guide was constructed from the literature and used to elicit responses.
RESULTS: Framework analysis showed that nurses perceived four main challenges in managing pain namely lack of clinical guidelines, lack of structured pain assessment tool, limited autonomy in decision making and the patient's condition itself.
CONCLUSIONS: Nurses' decision making and pain management can influence the quality of care given to critically ill patients. It is important to overcome the clinical problems that are faced when dealing with pain experience.
RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: There is a need for nursing education on pain management. Providing up to date and practical strategies may help to reduce nurses' challenges in managing pain among critically ill patients. Broader autonomy and effective decision making can be seen as beneficial for the nurses besides having a clearer and structured pain management guidelines.
challenges, critical care nurses, critically ill, pain guidelines, pain management
1254-1262
Subramanian, Pathmawathi
b3d24a03-5680-4737-b81c-6eb55765ea2e
Allcock, Nick
89bceb9f-06de-45c1-9105-09f56709b75e
James, Veronica
dd514a41-d1ff-4548-b1eb-5bd0ff21771f
Lathlean, Judith
98a74375-c265-47d2-b75b-5f0f3e14c1a9
May 2012
Subramanian, Pathmawathi
b3d24a03-5680-4737-b81c-6eb55765ea2e
Allcock, Nick
89bceb9f-06de-45c1-9105-09f56709b75e
James, Veronica
dd514a41-d1ff-4548-b1eb-5bd0ff21771f
Lathlean, Judith
98a74375-c265-47d2-b75b-5f0f3e14c1a9
Subramanian, Pathmawathi, Allcock, Nick, James, Veronica and Lathlean, Judith
(2012)
Challenges faced by nurses in managing pain in a critical care setting.
Journal of Clinical Nursing, 21 (9-10), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1365-2702.2011.03789.x).
(PMID:21777315)
Abstract
AIM: To explore nurses' challenges in managing pain among ill patients in critical care.
BACKGROUND: Pain can lead to many adverse medical consequences and providing pain relief is central to caring for ill patients. Effective pain management is vital since studies show patients admitted to critical care units still suffer from significant levels of acute pain. The effective delivery of care in clinical areas remains a challenge for nurses involved with care which is dynamic and constantly changing in critically ill.
DESIGN: Qualitative prospective exploratory design.
METHODS: This study employed semi structured interviews with nurses, using critical incident technique. Twenty-one nurses were selected from critical care settings from a large acute teaching health care trust in the UK. A critical incident interview guide was constructed from the literature and used to elicit responses.
RESULTS: Framework analysis showed that nurses perceived four main challenges in managing pain namely lack of clinical guidelines, lack of structured pain assessment tool, limited autonomy in decision making and the patient's condition itself.
CONCLUSIONS: Nurses' decision making and pain management can influence the quality of care given to critically ill patients. It is important to overcome the clinical problems that are faced when dealing with pain experience.
RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: There is a need for nursing education on pain management. Providing up to date and practical strategies may help to reduce nurses' challenges in managing pain among critically ill patients. Broader autonomy and effective decision making can be seen as beneficial for the nurses besides having a clearer and structured pain management guidelines.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 21 July 2011
Published date: May 2012
Keywords:
challenges, critical care nurses, critically ill, pain guidelines, pain management
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 360719
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/360719
ISSN: 0962-1067
PURE UUID: e8d35022-aab1-4d88-84d6-e1f74c6d0611
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Date deposited: 20 Dec 2013 10:22
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 15:41
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Author:
Pathmawathi Subramanian
Author:
Nick Allcock
Author:
Veronica James
Author:
Judith Lathlean
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