Pain Standards for Accredited Healthcare Organizations (ACDON Project): A Mixed Methods Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Review (First Phase)
2.2. Nominal Group Technique (Second Phase)
2.3. Delphi Technique (Third Phase)
2.4. Pilot Study (Fourth Phase)
3. Results
3.1. Literature Review (First Phase)
3.2. Nominal Group Technique (Second Phase)
3.3. Delphi Technique (Third Phase)
3.4. Pilot Study (Fourth Phase)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Area | Description | Number of Indicators |
---|---|---|
Evaluation and assessment of oncological pain | Quality criteria were incorporated with a focus on improving pain assessment using multidimensional scales and patient participation. In addition, assessment of family members and communication between the care team, caregivers, family members, and patients for adequate therapeutic adherence and improvement of clinical practice were included. | 5 |
Pharmacological treatment | Treatment should be multimodal, through combining individualized strategies, treatment of underlying cause, modification of the underlying treatment, and the use of rescue treatment therapies and interventional techniques were included. Quality criteria to ensure pharmacological treatment has a continuous pattern that has to be agreed between professional and patient, including additional therapeutic demand (rescue) in the event of breakthrough pain were included. | 6 |
Non-pharmacological treatment | Patients with chronic oncological pain requires a multidimensional approach. Quality criteria have been included to optimize pain management by considering proposals pertaining non-pharmacological measures that were aimed at improving the outcomes of cancer pain management with the ultimate goal of alleviating patient suffering. | 5 |
Palliative care | Access to palliative care services for patients with chronic cancer pain is fundamental. Palliative care should be included in the routine management of patients to ensure that there is a continuous assessment, and that the patient can be duly informed in a timely manner. | 4 |
Coordination | Effective coordination was highlighted for the optimal functioning of multidisciplinary teams. This coordination should be accompanied by information about the pain unit and other services that are available to the patient. | 4 |
Training, teaching, and research | It would be necessary for the service to include the training for professionals to achieve adequate communication of bad news to patients and families as well as for activities to prevent burnout among physicians. Research has been highlighted as a necessary activity for improving care. | 5 |
Patient safety | Quality criteria related to safe medication use, the prevention and control of drug interactions and adverse events as well as their timely reporting were included to ensure patient safety. | 6 |
Patient satisfaction | All clinical efforts should be aimed at improving the patient’s quality of life and experience with health services. Results related to analgesia should be obtained from patients and relatives as well as the degree of dependence of the patient and the care and multimodal attention that was received. | 4 |
Hospital | Essential Standards (Fulfilled/Total) | Recommended Standards (Fulfilled/Total) | Overall Compliance |
---|---|---|---|
Hospital 1 | 8/10 | 20/29 | 71.8% |
Hospital 2 | 10/10 | 29/29 | 100% |
Hospital 3 | 7/10 | 15/29 | 56.4% |
Hospital 4 | 9/10 | 27/29 | 92.3% |
Hospital 5 | 10/10 | 22/29 | 82.1% |
Hospital 6 | 8/10 | 19/29 | 69.2% |
Hospital 7 | 10/10 | 21/29 | 79.5% |
Hospital 8 | 10/10 | 29/29 | 100% |
Areas | Number of Standards | Overall Compliance |
---|---|---|
Assessment and counselling for cancer pain | 5 | 85% |
Pharmacological treatment | 6 | 92.5% |
Non-pharmacological treatment | 5 | 80% |
Palliative Care | 4 | 94.7% |
Coordination | 4 | 65.6% |
Training, education, and research | 5 | 62.5% |
Patient Safety | 6 | 87.5% |
Patient Satisfaction | 4 | 78.1% |
Areas | Standards | Overall Compliance |
---|---|---|
Pharmacological treatment | A specific record should be kept in the digital medical record of the “itinerary” through the WHO analgesic ladder, as well as the reasons for it (at the discretion of your responsible physician), to facilitate the best coordination between the responsible team and the inter-current (emergency) teams. | 62.5% |
Non-pharmacological treatment | In case of pain that does not subside with non-invasive treatment, a non-pharmacological interventional technique should be proposed to the patient. | 62.5% |
Coordination | Patient information should be provided about the Pain Unit, its portfolio of services, accessibility and the strategy designed for the care of patients with chronic oncological pain in a proactive manner. | 62.5% |
High resolution consultations should be implemented to reduce the discomfort associated with in-between-consultations. | 50% | |
A telephone follow-up plan should be established by calling the home of patients with cancer pain. | 62.5% | |
Training, education, and research | Actions should be taken to prevent burnout among professionals. For example: Increased psychological support to reduce burnout among professionals. | 25% |
The Pain Unit should participate in the development of new treatments and advances in the improvement of therapeutic effectiveness in the management of oncological pain, participating in research projects and clinical trials with direct translation to clinical practice. | 50% | |
Patient Safety | The reasons for deciding not to follow the WHO pain management ladder should be recorded in the digital medical record. | 62.5% |
Patient Satisfaction | There must be a procedure for assessing the patient’s experience and using this information to improve the care process. | 50% |
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Pérez, C.; Martin-Delgado, J.; Vinuesa, M.; Ibor, P.J.; Guilabert, M.; Gomez, J.; Beato, C.; Sánchez-Jiménez, J.; Velázquez, I.; Calvo-Espinos, C.; et al. Pain Standards for Accredited Healthcare Organizations (ACDON Project): A Mixed Methods Study. J. Pers. Med. 2021, 11, 102. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11020102
Pérez C, Martin-Delgado J, Vinuesa M, Ibor PJ, Guilabert M, Gomez J, Beato C, Sánchez-Jiménez J, Velázquez I, Calvo-Espinos C, et al. Pain Standards for Accredited Healthcare Organizations (ACDON Project): A Mixed Methods Study. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2021; 11(2):102. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11020102
Chicago/Turabian StylePérez, Concepción, Jimmy Martin-Delgado, Mercedes Vinuesa, Pedro J. Ibor, Mercedes Guilabert, José Gomez, Carmen Beato, Juana Sánchez-Jiménez, Ignacio Velázquez, Claudio Calvo-Espinos, and et al. 2021. "Pain Standards for Accredited Healthcare Organizations (ACDON Project): A Mixed Methods Study" Journal of Personalized Medicine 11, no. 2: 102. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11020102
APA StylePérez, C., Martin-Delgado, J., Vinuesa, M., Ibor, P. J., Guilabert, M., Gomez, J., Beato, C., Sánchez-Jiménez, J., Velázquez, I., Calvo-Espinos, C., Cánovas, M. L., Yáñez, J. A., Rodríguez, M., Baquero, J. L., Gallach, E., Folch, E., Tuca, A., Santiña, M., & Mira, J. J. (2021). Pain Standards for Accredited Healthcare Organizations (ACDON Project): A Mixed Methods Study. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 11(2), 102. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11020102