Abstract

SummaryPain is a common and distressing symptom experienced by intensive care patients. Assessing pain in this environment is challenging, and published guidelines have been inconsistently implemented. The Pain Assessment in INTensive care (PAINT) study aimed to evaluate the frequency and type of physician pain assessments with respect to published guidelines. This observational service evaluation considered all pain and analgesia‐related entries in patients’ records over a 24‐h period, in 45 adult intensive care units (ICUs) in London and the South‐East of England. Data were collected from 750 patients, reflecting the practice of 362 physicians. Nearly two‐thirds of patients (n = 475, 64.5%, 95%CI 60.9–67.8%) received no physician‐documented pain assessment during the 24‐h study period. Just under one‐third (n = 215, 28.6%, 95%CI 25.5–32.0%) received no nursing‐documented pain assessment, and over one‐fifth (n = 159, 21.2%, 95%CI 19.2–23.4)% received neither a doctor nor a nursing pain assessment. Two of the 45 ICUs used validated behavioural pain assessment tools. The likelihood of receiving a physician pain assessment was affected by the following factors: the number of nursing assessments performed; whether the patient was admitted as a surgical patient; the presence of tracheal tube or tracheostomy; and the length of stay in ICU. Physician‐documented pain assessments in the majority of participating ICUs were infrequent and did not utilise recommended behavioural pain assessment tools. Further research to identify factors influencing physician pain assessment behaviour in ICU, such as human factors or cultural attitudes, is urgently needed.

Highlights

  • Pain is common among patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs), with a prevalence of 40–77% [1,2,3,4]

  • The Pain Assessment in INTensive Care (PAINT) study was a retrospective observational service evaluation conducted by two anaesthetic trainee networks, the PanLondon Peri-operative Audit and Research Network (PLAN, www.uk-plan.net) and the South-East Anaesthetic Research Chain (SEARCH, www.searchkss.co.uk)

  • We audited practice against standards described by the American College of Critical Care Medicine [14]

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Summary

Methods

The Pain Assessment in INTensive Care (PAINT) study was a retrospective observational service evaluation conducted by two anaesthetic trainee networks, the PanLondon Peri-operative Audit and Research Network (PLAN, www.uk-plan.net) and the South-East Anaesthetic Research Chain (SEARCH, www.searchkss.co.uk). The PLAN and SEARCH networks geographically cover 43 acute NHS trusts across London, Essex, Surrey, Sussex and Hertfordshire, as defined by the Department of Health (Health and Social Care Information Centre, http://www.hscic.gov.uk). Between January and March 2015, individual ICUs identified one weekday 24-h study period (Monday to Friday), to collect data

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