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Preemptive Analgesia: An Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) and Multimodal Analgesic Component for Postoperative Pain Management

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MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Tia M. Zdych. Preemptive Analgesia: An Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (eras) and Multimodal Analgesic Component for Postoperative Pain Management. . n222. saint-francis.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/c09d9193-5810-4e19-a985-ef7017124aa3?locale=es.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

T. M. Zdych. (n222). Preemptive Analgesia: An Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) and Multimodal Analgesic Component for Postoperative Pain Management. https://saint-francis.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/c09d9193-5810-4e19-a985-ef7017124aa3?locale=es

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Tia M. Zdych. Preemptive Analgesia: An Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (eras) and Multimodal Analgesic Component for Postoperative Pain Management. n222. https://saint-francis.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/c09d9193-5810-4e19-a985-ef7017124aa3?locale=es.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

Postoperative pain remains an undermanaged aspect of perioperative patient care.
Overreliance on opioids places patients at risk for pain and opioid-related adverse events with
delayed recovery and increased hospital length of stay, cost, and patient morbidity and mortality
risk. Anesthesia providers play a crucial role in postoperative pain management and
inconsistencies remain regarding knowledge, awareness, and use of current evidence-based pain
management guideline recommendations.
The project’s purpose was to increase anesthesia providers’ knowledge, awareness, and
compliance with their facility and national organization preemptive analgesic evidence-based
guideline and protocol recommendations. A secondary goal included improved patient
postoperative pain-related outcomes (i.e., decreased narcotic use, initial pain score, and time to
discharge in PACU) in the project’s targeted patient surgical population.
An educational presentation with a one-group presurvey-postsurvey design was used to
assess anesthesia providers’ knowledge and awareness of facility and national organization
preemptive analgesic guideline and protocol recommendations. A retrospective/prospective chart
audit was used to assess provider preemptive analgesic ordering compliance and patient
postoperative pain-related outcome indicators pre- to post-intervention.
Positive provider knowledge and awareness gains were made despite not achieving set
project aims. These knowledge gains led to increased preemptive analgesic ordering compliance
rates from 44% pre-intervention to 73% and 71% one- and two-months post-intervention. Patient
postoperative pain-related outcome indicators minimally changed pre- to post-intervention and
did not achieve set aims and goals, yet these changes led the project manager to infer that when
appropriately prescribed, preemptive analgesics presented minimal pain-related outcome risk to
the project’s target patient population.
Following project intervention, preemptive analgesic prescribing became standard of
practice within the implementing facility. Increased provider compliance with evidence-based
guideline recommendations is possible through providing education and addressing identified
and perceived barriers to recommendation use in practice.

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