Patient-controlled analgesia: an assessment by 200 patients
- PMID: 9613264
- DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2044.1998.00314.x
Patient-controlled analgesia: an assessment by 200 patients
Abstract
Two hundred patients completed a questionnaire about their experiences of patient-controlled analgesia. The questionnaire covered the following topics: pre-operative information, reasons for pressing and not pressing the button, pain relief, side-effects, safety, advantages and disadvantages of patient-controlled analgesia, worries associated with its use and control over pain. A high level of satisfaction with the device, together with a view that it afforded control over pain, emerged from replies to simple, general questions. However, more detailed questions revealed side-effects and fears that constrained its use and hence patients' ability to control pain. Control is predominantly a feature of the professional's view of patient-controlled analgesia, rather than the patient's experience of this analgesic technique.
Comment in
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Implementing PCA--the importance of information and control.Anaesthesia. 1998 Oct;53(10):1028; author reply 1029-30. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2044.1998.0669z.x. Anaesthesia. 1998. PMID: 9893550 No abstract available.
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Implementing PCA--the importance of information and control.Anaesthesia. 1998 Oct;53(10):1029; author reply 1029-30. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2044.1998.0669a.x. Anaesthesia. 1998. PMID: 9893551 No abstract available.
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