Abstract

Background: Identified on an acute care behavioral health unit has been a gap in nursing education and knowledge about opioid addiction and pain management. Nurses are often frustrated that there seems to be no clear way to manage acute pain in individuals suffering with opioid addiction. Because of difficult behavior sometimes displayed in those with opioid addiction, nurses may be prone to attitudes that reflect bias on their part when administering care. The psychiatric nurses need to learn about the disease model of addiction so its premise can be shared with the opioid addicted patients and their families. Purpose: The purpose of this proposal is to create a plan to teach the Behavioral Health nurses about opioid addiction and management of acute pain to help those afflicted with opioid addiction. Plan: The plan for addressing the gap includes education about opioid addiction, the barriers presented by stigma and bias, and the use of opioid replacement therapy to manage acute pain in those with opioid addiction. Patient education will focus on addiction as a disease and the impact of stigma on those with the disease. Implementation: Implementation of the project will include the development of two classes about management of acute pain in opioid addicted patients emphasizing education of the nurse and patient as the prime solution to this dilemma. The classes will stress the need to model conversations with psychiatric physicians to develop strategies to manage acute pain in patients with opioid addiction. Conclusion: Opioid replacement therapy seems to be the only answer for individuals in need of rehabilitation to end their burden of addiction. It should be accessible to any person with addiction to opioids in every healthcare setting.

Highlights

  • The concept of presenting a class about pain management for opioid addicted patients was born out of requests to the Behavioral Health (BH) Nurse Educator from hospital medical nurses

  • The proposal is to teach the Behavioral Health nurses about opioid addiction and management of acute pain for those afflicted with opioid addiction

  • Discussion will include the clear need for education as evidenced by psychiatric and hospital nurses voicing their concerns about opioid addiction and management of acute pain

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of presenting a class about pain management for opioid addicted patients was born out of requests to the Behavioral Health (BH) Nurse Educator from hospital medical nurses. These nurses wanted to receive education about “managing the drug seekers.”. Similar to the feelings of the hospital medical nurses, the psychiatric nurses’ challenge was to provide a positive patient experience This was thwarted by behaviors exhibited by patients with opioid addiction. Psychiatric nurses who work at the BH unit are often faced with the angry and demanding behaviors of some opioid addicted patients requesting pain relief. The nurses are flexible in their roles and work together to provide compassionate care for the extremely mentally ill

Description of Course
Planning and Implementation Timeline
Rationale
Review of the Literature
Best Practices
Recommendation
Project Launch
Identification of Inter-professional Relationships
Discussion of Relationships
Organizational Sustainability and Implementation Support
Resources for Implementation
Discussion of Outcomes
Impacts on Future Outcomes
10. Identification of Inter-professional Participants
11. Inter-professional Collaboration
12. Closing the Gap
Findings
13. Reflection
Full Text
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