Continuous pain is often not assessed during neonatal intensive care

In an analysis of 243 neonatal intensive care units from 18 European countries, investigators found that only 2113 of 6648 (31.8%) newborns were assessed for prolonged, continuous pain. Daily assessments of continuous pain occurred in only 10.4% of newborns.

Intensive care units with local pain management guidelines, nursing champions, and increased surgical admissions performed assessments of continuous pain more frequently than other units.

"A lot of these babies are exposed to prolonged pain caused by surgical operations, repeated invasive procedures, or inflammatory diseases," said Dr. Kanwaljeet J. S. Anand, lead author of the Acta Paediatrica study. "In the absence of frequent assessments, I'm concerned that many babies may be under-treated or over-treated for painful conditions. We need to develop better ways for monitoring pain in newborn babies."

More information: Kanwaljeet J. S. Anand et al. Assessment of Continuous Pain in Newborns admitted to NICUs in 18 European Countries, Acta Paediatrica (2017). DOI: 10.1111/apa.13810

Journal information: Acta Paediatrica
Provided by Wiley
Citation: Continuous pain is often not assessed during neonatal intensive care (2017, March 6) retrieved 20 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2017-03-pain-neonatal-intensive.html
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