Thats the way i took it, but i didn't think that was the case, hence the "i hope im reading into this too much" commentI think he's reading too much into it as in " you might consider giving some pain relief, as if its a left field option"
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but a couple of non specific points.....
Pain management is a mainstay of basic health care, to deny patients analgesia is inhumane and negligent at best.
A vast majority of patients we attend have pain as the chief complaint, and should be managed accordingly. Im constantly amazed at the lack of and sometimes aversion by ambo's to narcotic use.
Uncomplicated fractures and severe musculoskeletal pain and without major trauma who do not get adequate pain relief before movement and or splinting is wrong. And while ive mentioned splinting, if anyone truly thinks that "splinting reduces pain" as a method of primary analgesia needs to re-examine their priorities as spliting without analgesia is barbaric
Analgesia IMO should not be subject to half assed management based on an arbitrary scene time that realy makes no difference to a majority of patients. For your major trauma and time critical patients that really cannot wait then do what you need to do, but i think the industry uses those time critical patients to make an excuse for itself regarding lack of appropriate inervention for other patients
Leaving patients in pain because they can "tolerate it" is inexcusable in my opinion - i think i saw "load of crap" regarding this? If i did i like it.
Wong baker is a handy tool but should not be the only guide to pain assessment. If the patient says they have 10/10 pain but they dont have what you think is an appropriate facial grimace then your adding your own bias into the mix which actually reduces the validity othe assessment scales your using anyway
The urban legend of narcotics reducing the effectiveness of bedside assessment has been debunked long ago
If providers are chicken about about giving narcs based on possible allergies, complications etc" i'd have to say that your not familiar enough with the drug, inexperienced in its use, or unsure of your own history taking.
Side effects of narcotics can be managed if needed so refusing analgesia based solely on spidey sense with no information other than the idea that "they might have a reaction" probably says more about providers education or exprience than anything else
All my patients arrive at emergency with their pain managed as best as it can and within the limts set down by my clinical department. 40mg of morph or 200mcg of fent generally makes for a happy patient with controlled pain who wasn't a blubbering mess when they were splited, loaded and transported.
Not directed at anyone, just a general rant about recurring topics across multiple threads and forums