Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Orthopedic professionals’ recognition and knowledge of pain and perceived barriers to optimal pain management at five hospitals

  • Fadi Bouri
  • , Walid El Ansari
  • , Shady Mahmoud
  • , Ahmed Elhessy
  • , Abdulla Al-Ansari
  • , Mohamed Al Ateeq Al-Dosari
  • Hamad Medical Corporation
  • Qatar University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Pain is a challenge for orthopedic healthcare professionals (OHCP). However, pain studies examined the competencies of a single OHCP category, did not consider various pain management domains or barriers to optimal pain service, and are deficient across the Arabic Eastern Mediterranean region. We surveyed OHCP’s recognition and knowledge of pain and perceived barriers to optimal pain service (361 OHCP, five hospitals). Chi square compared doctors’ (n = 63) vs. nurses/physiotherapists’ (n = 187) views. In terms of pain recognition, more nurses had pain management training, confidently assessed pediatric/elderly pain, were aware of their departments’ pain protocols, and felt that their patients receive proper pain management. More doctors comfortably prescribed opiate medications and agreed that some nationalities were more sensitive to pain. For pain knowledge, more nurses felt patients are accurate in assessing their pain, vital signs are accurate in assessing children’s pain, children feel less pain because of nervous system immaturity, narcotics are not preferred due respiratory depression, and knew pre-emptive analgesia. As for barriers to optimal pain service, less nurses agreed about the lack of local policies/guidelines, knowledge, and skills; time to pre-medicate patients; knowledge about medications; complexity of the clinical environment; and physicians being not comfortable prescribing pain medication. We conclude that doctors required confidence in pain, especially pediatric and geriatric pain, using vital signs in assessing pain and narcotics use. Their most perceived barriers were lack of local policies/guidelines and skills. Nurses required more confidence in medications, caring for patients on narcotics, expressed fewer barriers than doctors, and the complexity of the clinical environment was their highest barrier. Educational programs with clinical application could improve OHCPs’ pain competencies/clinical practices in pain assessment and administration of analgesics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number98
JournalHealthcare (Switzerland)
Volume6
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Geriatric and pediatric pain
  • Inpatient pain
  • Orthopedic
  • Pain assessment/intensity
  • Pain attitudes
  • Pain knowledge/management
  • Questionnaire

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Orthopedic professionals’ recognition and knowledge of pain and perceived barriers to optimal pain management at five hospitals'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this