Impact of Clinical Pharmacist Consultations on Postoperative Pain in Ambulatory Surgery
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Ethical Approval
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
2.4. Care Pathway in the Control Group
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- Several weeks before surgery, the date of surgery was scheduled with the surgeon.
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- Several days before surgery, the patient attended a 30 min anesthesia consultation. This anesthesia consultation was divided into two 15 min consultations, one with an anesthesiologist and one with a nurse anesthetist.
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- The anesthesiologist explained to the patient the type of anesthesia, the type of surgery, the pre-operative preparation (taking your medication in the morning, respecting your age, taking a shower), ongoing chronic treatment (in particular anticoagulant and antiplatelet medications), and the analgesic treatment. At the end of this consultation, the patient was prescribed their postoperative analgesic treatment so that they could have them at home before the ambulatory surgery.
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- The nurse anesthetist reminded the patient of all the logistical modalities inherent to the ambulatory surgery: the time at which they had to stop eating, the rules of hygiene including when and how to take a shower, when and how to organize transport to the hospital, and how to take the chronic treatment in the morning, etc.
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- Between the anesthesia consultation and surgery, the patient had to go to the local pharmacy to collect their analgesic treatment.
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- On the day of surgery: after surgery, if the patient had no adverse events, they were discharged home.
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- The postoperative follow-up was conducted via the SMS platform Memoquest®.
2.5. Care Pathway in the Intervention Group
2.6. Pharmacist Consultation
2.7. Follow-Up and Data Collection
2.8. Outcome
2.9. Statistical Analyses
3. Results
3.1. Flowchart
3.2. General Characteristics of Outpatients
3.3. Pain
3.4. Satisfaction
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Checklist STROBE
Appendix B. Patient Questionnaire
Appendix C
Appendix D
Appendix E
Appendix F
References
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Data | Control Group n (%) | Intervention Group n (%) | Overall n (%) | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age, mean (SD 1) | 44.07 (17.38) | 47.28 (18.33) | 45.68 (17.9) | 0.16 |
Anesthesia | 0.28 | |||
Locoregional | 45 (36%) | 36 (29%) | 81 (32.4%) | |
General | 80 (64%) | 89 (71%) | 169 (67.6%) | |
WHO 2 analgesic step | 0.76 | |||
1 | 26 (21%) | 29 (23%) | 55 (22.0%) | |
2 | 98 (78%) | 96 (77%) | 194 (77.6%) | |
3 | 1 (1%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.4%) | |
Surgical specialty | 0.0007 | |||
Orthopedics | 41 (33%) | 58 (46%) | 99 (39.6%) | |
Plastic surgery | 35 (28%) | 23 (18%) | 58 (23.2%) | |
MF/ENT 3 | 30 (24%) | 12 (10%) | 42 (16.8%) | |
Odontology | 5 (4%) | 16 (13%) | 21 (8.4%) | |
Visceral/Digestive | 7 (6%) | 10 (8%) | 17 (6.8%) | |
Vascular | 2 (2%) | 5 (4%) | 7 (2.8%) | |
Gynecology | 3 (2%) | 1 (1%) | 4 (1.6%) | |
Ophthalmology | 2 (2%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (0.8%) |
Data | Absolute Difference of Risk of Pain [95% CI] | p-Value |
---|---|---|
Group | ||
Control | 0 (reference) | |
Intervention | −16% [−27 to −4%] | 0.02 |
WHO 1 step (linear effect) | +5%/step [−8 to 19%] | 0.43 |
Anesthesia | ||
Locoregional | 0 (reference) | |
General | +1% [−13 to 15%] | 0.85 |
Surgical specialty | ||
Orthopedics | 0 (reference) | |
Plastic surgery | −2% [−17 to 13 %] | 0.79 |
MF/ENT 2 | +9% [−8.8 to 27.5%] | 0.31 |
Odontology | +6% [−16 to 29 %] | 0.59 |
Other | +4% [−16 to 24%] | 0.72 |
Pain Intensity 1 | Control Group n (%) | Intervention Group n (%) | Unadjusted Difference [95% CI] | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pain intensity > 3 | 30 (31%) | 16 (14%) | −17% [−27 to −5%] | 0.022 |
Pain intensity > 5 | 14 (15%) | 5 (5%) | −10% [−18 to −1%] | 0.03 |
Pain intensity > 7 | 2 (2%) | 0 (0%) | −2% [−7 to 3%] | 0.22 |
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Barat, E.; Chenailler, C.; Gillibert, A.; Pouplin, S.; Varin, R.; Compere, V. Impact of Clinical Pharmacist Consultations on Postoperative Pain in Ambulatory Surgery. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3967. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20053967
Barat E, Chenailler C, Gillibert A, Pouplin S, Varin R, Compere V. Impact of Clinical Pharmacist Consultations on Postoperative Pain in Ambulatory Surgery. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(5):3967. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20053967
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarat, Eric, Catherine Chenailler, André Gillibert, Sophie Pouplin, Remi Varin, and Vincent Compere. 2023. "Impact of Clinical Pharmacist Consultations on Postoperative Pain in Ambulatory Surgery" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 5: 3967. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20053967
APA StyleBarat, E., Chenailler, C., Gillibert, A., Pouplin, S., Varin, R., & Compere, V. (2023). Impact of Clinical Pharmacist Consultations on Postoperative Pain in Ambulatory Surgery. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(5), 3967. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20053967