Staff Experience of Pain Management: An Improvement in Palliative Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Section
2.1. Design
2.2. Setting
2.3. Data Collection
Professions | Numbers (team south) | Numbers (team north) |
---|---|---|
Physicians | 2 | 2 |
Physiotherapist | 1 | 1 |
Occupational therapist | 0,5 (shared between the two teams) | 0,5 (shared between the two teams) |
Social worker | 0,5 (shared between the two teams) | 0,5 (shared between the two teams) |
Nurses | 6 | 8 |
Total | 10 | 12 |
Meeting time | Number of meeting | Data collection |
---|---|---|
September 2012 | 3 | 3 interviews and 20 + 14 + 7 = 41 narratives |
October | 1 | 1 interview and 6 narratives |
November | 1 | 1 interview and 10 narratives |
December | 1 | 1 interview and 13 narratives |
January | 1 | 1 interview and 13 narratives |
February | 1 | 1 interview and 10 narratives |
Total | 8 | 8 group interviews and 93 narratives |
2.4. Data Analysis
Meaning unit | Condensed content | Coding | Subcategory | Category |
---|---|---|---|---|
We have to write it down (pain rating). It is just as important as the sign that we are given a drug… and that I have asked about the pain every time | Documentation of pain rating every time | Important to document the pain | Comprehensibility of pain rating | Awareness of Pain Management |
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Results
3.1.1. Awareness of Pain Management
“It will be different when you see a number than that it says that the patient has pain, says NRS 4 so you can see it very clearly, feels natural to write it... you’ve got this target, is it more than four, it becomes an action otherwise with body text it is so subjective writing have much or little pain… It’s much easier to shoot at it… now I just had to commit the misconduct or else... it shows it differently when we have numbers… It a little text and is very objectively described by the patient... it is very easy for us others to follow”.
“We will document the entire time they estimated, as it is important to how we sign a drip and is just as important to document, eventually it becomes a habit… That we do not think about pain rating because the patient estimates no pain, sometimes we do not write it all down… but it is of course important. Just thinking that the patient is not in pain and it need not be written. Indeed, many patients are estimated by VRS who have expressed that they are not in pain”.
“If the patient estimated one of ESAS, the patient has actually expressed their pain”.
“I just have to think about that pain 0 is a value in itself. It’s important to write it down so we can follow the process and that we can get statistics that the patients did not have pain, that’s something to be proud off”.
“We must continue to estimate that patients get better pain-relief and to make it appear that we are actually good at this… It may be that if we become better at pain rating we may be better at other things too... oral health, we are not good at it and maybe we get better in other tasks too”.
“We still fumble with what to do with pain estimates but we had started talking more about them, which is fine, we learn together as a team.”
“If you work with it (instructions), you become reminded and then eventually it becomes a habit, a routine.”
3.1.2. Participation in Pain Management
“Had you (improvement leader) selected a month from the beginning we would probably protest; now we actually choose to extend the time and know what is important and meaningful”.
“Since many of us are asking the same thing and have an equivalent instrument so it will be less confusing for patients too… If you asked them before, it was as if they had never heard the question. Now it’s very natural for them to say, yes I have a five or a three”.
“The advantage is what the patient himself thinks of it; I’ve got better, worse, what did I have, what is it and how was it.”
“Now it that it’s typed comments in ESAS in a different way than before, there is something to discuss ... the patient has received chemotherapy and is tired ... needs to have logical explanations, otherwise we sit and speculate about something in the team meeting”.
“There was not, we decided and here we have the result”...“ To continue working in this way, so it becomes a habit or a routine based on various good local instructions for the benefit of patients and the business”.
“When we see the result in black and white, what’s good and not so good ... if you can’t measure you can’t know”.
3.1.3. Safety at Pain Management
“Perhaps concentrating on something and focusing on one area at a time, the next time will be something else and look at how we work with this ... I think it is important to focus on one thing ... we have a lot we can learn from what we already have and how we can become good… with a routine it becomes obvious ... you cannot have 18 different things to deal with at the same time”.
“Improvement work takes time to get mentally, and then once you do, it did not take longer”.
“How we document is less important for now, we go around crowing solutions to keep it up with it when you cannot think about how and what documents... If you get stressed, you’re in a hurry there is a risk that you go back to the old routines... Sometimes it not won’t work.”
“Of course it is always important with feedback all the time on what you do, otherwise I know why we do this and then you lose why do we do it here, so continuous evaluation is good.”
“You cannot run your own race just because you feel like it”.
“We are so stuffed with information from relatives and patients so we will capture that moment and then we need and requires an infinite silence to get it down on paper”.
“The value of that objective estimation + documentation as possible = good for the patient AND for the team”.
3.2. Discussion
3.3. Limitations
4. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Unné, A.; Rosengren, K. Staff Experience of Pain Management: An Improvement in Palliative Care. Pharmacy 2013, 1, 119-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy1020119
Unné A, Rosengren K. Staff Experience of Pain Management: An Improvement in Palliative Care. Pharmacy. 2013; 1(2):119-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy1020119
Chicago/Turabian StyleUnné, Anna, and Kristina Rosengren. 2013. "Staff Experience of Pain Management: An Improvement in Palliative Care" Pharmacy 1, no. 2: 119-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy1020119
APA StyleUnné, A., & Rosengren, K. (2013). Staff Experience of Pain Management: An Improvement in Palliative Care. Pharmacy, 1(2), 119-136. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy1020119