American Society for Pain Management Nursing guidelines on monitoring for opioid-induced sedation and respiratory depression.
Jarzyna D, Jungquist CR, Pasero C, Willens JS, Nisbet A, Oakes L, Dempsey SJ, Santangelo D, Polomano RC.
Pain Manag Nurs. 2011 Sep;12(3):118-145
.e10. doi: 10.1016/j.pmn.2011.06.008.Source
University Medical Center, Tucson, Arizona 85724, USA.Abstract
As
the complexity of analgesic therapies increases, priorities of care
must be established to balance aggressive pain management with measures
to prevent or minimize adverse events and to ensure high quality and
safe care. Opioid analgesia remains the primary pharmacologic
intervention for managing pain in hospitalized patients. Unintended
advancing sedation and respiratory depression are two of the most
serious opioid-related adverse events. Multiple factors, including
opioid dosage, route of administration, duration of therapy,
patient-specific factors, and desired goals of therapy, can influence
the occurrence of these adverse events. Furthermore, there is an urgent
need to educate all members of the health care team about the dangers
and potential attributes of administration of sedating medications
concomitant with opioid analgesia and the importance of initiating
rational multimodal analgesic plans to help avoid adverse events.
Nurses
play an important role in:
1) identifying patients at risk for
unintended advancing sedation and respiratory depression from opioid
therapy;
2) implementing plans of care to assess and monitor patients;
and
3) intervening to prevent the worsening of adverse events.
Despite
the frequency of opioid-induced sedation, there are no universally
accepted guidelines to direct effective and safe assessment and
monitoring practices for patients receiving opioid analgesia. Moreover,
there is a paucity of information and no consensus about the benefits of
technology-supported monitoring, such as pulse oximetry (measuring
oxygen saturation) and capnography (measuring end-tidal carbon dioxide),
in hospitalized patients receiving opioids for pain therapy. To date,
there have not been any randomized clinical trials to establish the
value of technologic monitoring in preventing adverse respiratory
events. Additionally, the use of technology-supported monitoring is
costly, with far-reaching implications for hospital and nursing
practices. As a result, there are considerable variations in screening
for risk and monitoring practices. All of these factors prompted the
American Society for Pain Management Nursing to approve the formation of
an expert consensus panel to examine the scientific basis and state of
practice for assessment and monitoring practices for adult hospitalized
patients receiving opioid analgesics for pain control and to propose
recommendations for patient care, education, and systems-level changes
that promote quality care and patient safety.
Copyright © 2011 American Society for Pain Management Nursing. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserve
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