Basic Human Needs Comfort and Pain Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Basic Human Needs Comfort and Pain Management

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Title: Basic Human Needs Comfort Author: Frederic Penn Last modified by: pennd Created Date: 10/28/2000 5:47:58 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Basic Human Needs Comfort and Pain Management


1
Basic Human NeedsComfort and Pain Management
2
Pain
  • Unpleasant, subjective sensory and emotional
    experience associated with an actual or potential
    tissue damage
  • Can be a factor inhibiting the ability and
    willingness to recover from illness
  • Subjective experience

3
Comfort
  • Concept central to the art of nursing
  • Through comfort measures nurses provide strength,
    hope, solace, support, encouragement, and
    assistance
  • As subjective as pain

4
Pain
  • McCaffery on Pain-Pain is whatever the
    experiencing person says it is, existing whenever
    the person says it does. (Margo McCaffery, 1979)
  • Pain relief is a basic legal right (American Bar
    Association, 2000)
  • Nurses are ethically and legally responsible for
    managing pain and relieving suffering.

5
Pain Management
  • Effective pain management reduces physical
    discomfort
  • Promotes earlier mobilization and return to work
  • Shortens hospital stay and reduces health care
    costs

6
Pain Management
7
Nature of Pain
  • Subjective, highly individualized
  • Stimulus can be physical and/or mental in nature
  • Pain is tiring, places demands on persons energy
  • Can interfere with relationships and influence
    the meaning of life

8
Nature of Pain
  • Cannot be objectively measured
  • Certain types of pain produce predictable
    symptoms
  • Pain Assessment-nurse relies on clients words and
    behaviors
  • Protective physiologic mechanism, changes behavior

9
Physiology of PainCategories
  • Acute
  • Chronic
  • Idiopathic Pain
  • Cancer pain
  • Pain by Inferred Pathology/Nociceptive
    Neuropathic
  • Pain as a result of a Metabolic Need/Ischemic
    Pain

10
Nociceptive Pain
  • Normal processing of stimuli that damages normal
    tissue or has the potential to do so if prolonged
  • Usually responsive to nonopioids or opioids
  • Somatic or visceral

11
Somatic Pain
  • Arises from bone, joint, muscle, skin or
    connective tissue
  • Usually aching, throbbing, well-localized pain
  • Responds to traditional analgesia

12
Visceral Pain
  • Arises from visceral organs such as the GI tract,
    heart, and pancreas.
  • Can be subdivided further
  • 1. Tumor involvement of organ
  • 2. Obstruction of hollow viscus

13
Neuropathic Pain
  • Abnormal processing of sensory input by the
    peripheral or CNS
  • Treatment usually with tricyclic antidepressants,
    SSRIs, anticonvulsants
  • Centrally generated pain
  • Peripherally generated pain

14
Idiopathic Pain
  • Chronic pain in the absence of an identifiable
    cause
  • Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

15
Ischemic Pain
  • Pain as a result of the metabolic need for oxygen
  • Warning sign of tissue damage
  • Cardiac pain (angina, MI)
  • Vascular pain- Peripheral vascular disease,
    intermittent claudication

16
Nociceptive Pain
  • Transduction
  • Transmission
  • Perception
  • Modulation

17
Gate Control Theory of Pain
  • Pain impulses can be regulated or even blocked by
    gating mechanism along CNS
  • Theory suggests that pain impulses pass when gate
    is open and blocked when gate is closed
  • Closing the gate is basis for pain relief
    interventions

18
Gate Control Theory of Pain
  • Involves the addition of mechanoreceptors (A-beta
    neurons), which releases inhibiting
    neurotransmitter (Serotonin)
  • If dominant input is from A-beta fibers, gating
    mechanism will close, pain reduced, due to
    release of Serotonin (Back rub)
  • If dominant input from A-delta fiber, gate will
    be open and pain perceived
  • Release of endorphins also close gate

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20
Physiological Response to Pain
  • ANS stimulated as pain impulses ascend the spinal
    cord
  • Pain of low to moderate intensity and superficial
    pain elicit the fight or flight reaction
  • Sympathetic stimulation results in physiologic
    responses (Increased heart rate, peripheral
    vasoconstriction, dilatation of bronchial tubes,
    increased blood sugar)

21
Physiological Response to Pain
  • Continuous pain or severe, deep pain (visceral)
    involving organs puts the parasympathetic system
    into effect
  • Parasympathetic stimulation results in pallor,
    muscle tension, decreased heart rate and BP, N/V,
    weakness, exhaustion

22
Behavioral Responses to Pain
  • Pain threatens physical psychological
    well-being
  • Some people choose not to express pain (belief,
    value, cultural influences)
  • Typical body movements that indicate pain
    clenching teeth, grimace, holding area, bent
    posture

23
Acute Pain
  • Follows acute injury, disease, surgical
    intervention
  • Rapid onset
  • Varies in intensity (mild-severe)
  • Lasts a brief period of time (less than 6 months)

24
Chronic Pain
  • Prolonged
  • Varies in intensity
  • Lasts longer than 6 months
  • Also known as chronic non-malignant pain
  • Arthritis, headache, myofascial pain, low back
    pain

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Cancer Pain
  • Pain that is due to tumor progression
  • Related to pathology, invasive procedures,
    infection, toxicities of Rx
  • Can be acute or chronic, nociceptive or
    neuropathic
  • At the actual site or distant to the site
    (Referred pain)

27
Factors Influencing Pain
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Culture
  • Meaning of pain
  • Attention
  • Anxiety
  • Fatigue
  • Previous Experience
  • Coping Style
  • Family Social Support

28
Nursing ProcessAssessment
  • AHCPR guidelines for assessing pain
  • Clients expression of pain
  • Characteristics of pain
  • Onset duration
  • Location
  • Intensity (Pain scales-numerical, FACES)

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Assessment
  • Quality
  • Pain pattern
  • Concomitant Symptoms
  • Effect of pain on client (physical, behavioral,
    effect on ADL)
  • Cultural Considerations

32
Nursing ProcessNursing Diagnosis
  • Anxiety
  • Alteration in Comfort
  • Self-care Deficit
  • Sleep Pattern Dysfunction
  • Sexual Dysfunction

33
Nursing ProcessImplementation
  • Non-Pharmacological and pharmacological Methods
  • Non-pharmacologic methods-lessen pain, can be
    used at home or in hospital
  • Utilize cognitive-behavioral physical
    approaches
  • Allow patients some control

34
Non-pharmacological Methods
  • Acupuncture
  • Relaxation
  • Guided Imagery
  • Distraction
  • Music
  • Biofeedback
  • Self-Hypnosis
  • Reducing Pain Perception
  • Cutaneous Stimulation (Heat or Cold application,
    massage, TENS unit)

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39
Pharmacologic Methods
  • Require a physicians order
  • Guidelines set by regulatory agencies
  • Analgesics most common method
  • Tendency to under treat with pain meds

40
Analgesics
  • Non-opioid or non-narcotic agents non-steroidal
    anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDS)
  • Narcotics, Opioids
  • Adjuvants, Co-analgesics

41
NSAIDS
  • Relief of mild to moderate pain
  • Believed to inhibit prostaglandins inhibits
    cellular response during inflammation
  • Acts on peripheral nerve receptors to reduce the
    transmission reception of pain
  • Does not cause sedation or respiratory depression
    or interfere with bowel/bladder function
  • Avoid prolonged or overuse in elderly

42
NSAIDS
  • Used in arthritic pain, minor surgical, dental
    procedures, low back pain, should be initially
    used in mild-moderate post-op pain
  • Motrin, Naprosyn, Indocin, Toradol

43
Opioids
  • Moderate to severe pain
  • Act on CNS, act on higher brain centers spinal
    cord binding with opiate receptors to modify
    perception of or reaction to pain
  • Risk for depression of vital nervous system
    functions

44
Opioids
  • If pain is anticipated for longer than 12-24
    hours, ATC timing should be used instead of PRN
    timing
  • Opioids can be used effectively with elderly,
    START LOW GO SLOW
  • Morphine, Demerol, Codeine, Percocet, Fentanyl,
    Hydromorphone
  • Opioid antagonist- NARCAN-reverses effect

45
Adjuvant Therapy
  • Sedatives, anti-anxiety, muscle relaxants
  • Enhance pain control or relieve symptoms
    associated with pain
  • Vistaril, Elavil, Thorazine, Valium, Ativan, Xanax

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47
Patient-Controlled Analgesia PCA
  • Drug delivery system
  • Patients have control over pain therapy
  • Safe method for post-op, traumatic, or cancer
    pain
  • Self-administration without risk of overdose
  • IV administration

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PCA Prescription
  • Loading Dose
  • Basal (Continuous rate)
  • On demand dose
  • Hourly maximum amounts can be prescribed

50
Local Regional Anesthetics
  • Wound suturing
  • Delivery of baby
  • Performing simple surgery
  • Epidural Analgesia for post-op pain management,
    LD pain, chronic cancer pain
  • On-Q Pain Pump

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53
Epidural Pain Management
  • Short or long term
  • Administered into spinal epidural space
  • Catheter is left in place, secured with tape and
    dressing
  • Can be continuous infusion or daily injection

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Epidural Pain Management
  • Monitor hourly for
  • 1. Catheter Displacement
  • 2. Catheter Function
  • 3. Respiratory Depression
  • 4. Side effects N/V, itching, urinary
    retention, constipation
  • 5. Pain effect

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Cancer Pain Management
  • Long acting preparations, sustained release
  • Drug dependence low in cancer related pain
  • Can develop tolerance, requiring higher doses
  • Goal is to minimize pain, rather than cure it

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61
Clicker Question
  • 1. When a smiling and cooperative client
    complains of discomfort, nurses caring for this
    client often harbor misconceptions about the
    clients pain. To properly care for clients in
    pain, nurses need to remember that
  • A. Chronic pain is psychological in nature.
  • B. Clients are the best judges of their pain.
  • C. Regular use of narcotic analgesics leads to
    drug addiction.
  • D. The amount of pain is reflective of actual
    tissue damage.

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62
Clicker Question
  • 2. Established pain management guidelines direct
    nurses to frequently assess the clients pain.
    The most appropriate action for the nurse to take
    when assessing the clients reaction to pain is
    to
  • A. Ask what precipitates pain.
  • B. Question the client about the location of
    pain.
  • C. Offer the client a pain scale to objectively
    identify the pain.
  • D. Use open-ended questions to find out about
    the clients pain.

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63
Clicker Question
  • 3. A client has just undergone abdominal
    surgery. When discussing with the client several
    pain relief interventions, the most appropriate
    recommendation would be
  • A. Adjunctive therapy
  • B. Nonopioids
  • C. NSAIDs
  • D. PCA pain management

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