Keywords

cancer pain management, clinical trial, pain scale, quality improvement, quality of care, simulation

 

Authors

  1. Harting, Brian MD
  2. Abrams, Richard MD
  3. Hasler, Scott MD
  4. Odwazny, Richard MS, FACHE
  5. McNutt, Robert MD, FACP

Abstract

Context: A computer simulator of pain care provided an environment for residents to learn to (1) rapidly induce pain relief; (2) measure pain scores at appropriate time intervals; (3) use induction doses to estimate, early in care, the long-acting pain medication requirements; and (4) escalate long-acting agents to ensure a smooth and nonvarying pain-control curve. We studied whether lessons learned on the simulator translated into improved pain control for patients with cancer-related pain crises.

 

Study Design and Measures: We compared pain scores for 48 hours in 2 groups: 20 patients admitted consecutively, solely because of an acute exacerbation of pain, prior to training our residents on a simulator and 20 patients post-training. Training at the beginning of an oncology rotation consisted of education about pain control followed by practice on simulated cases of patients with cancer-related pain crises. Outcome measures were average pain scores compared using linear regression and the frequency of using long-acting agents early in a patient's care.

 

Results: Pain control in the first 48 hours of care improved in the postintervention period; the slope of the pain scores actually increased in the preintervention period and declined in the postintervention period (P < .0005). Residents used long-acting agents early in patients' care in 35% (7/20) in the preperiod and 90% (18/20) in the postperiod (P < .001).

 

Conclusions: Residents developed pain care treatment skills on a computer-based simulator that translated into improved control of acute, cancer-related pain.