Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

New medical standards aim to manage kids' pain

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Apr, 2023 01:11 PM
  • New medical standards aim to manage kids' pain

OTTAWA - The Health Standards Organization has released a new set of guidelines to help hospital workers manage children's pain — particularly for those who can't communicate when they're hurt.

It's the first national standard in the world focused on pediatric pain.

Emergency physician and pediatric pain researcher Dr. Samina Ali says for a long time, doctors believed young children's nervous systems were so underdeveloped they couldn't feel or remember pain.

"In the mid-'80s, babies were receiving open heart surgery with no anesthesia," said Ali, who is also a professor of pediatrics and an adjunct professor of emergency medicine at the University of Alberta.

"Even if those little ones don't have the words at that time, their bodies remember and we see the long-term consequences of that in their physical and psychological development."

Since then, the country has made major strides toward managing the pain of young patients, and standardizing the approach across the county is another huge step, she said at a technical briefing on Monday morning.

Kids in hospital experience an average of six painful procedures per day, said Katie Birnie, a psychologist and associate scientific director for Solutions for Kids in Pain.

That number is closer to 14 for babies in intensive care.

The new standards lay out 34 criteria to stay on top of pain management for young patients, including mandating incident reports when a patient experiences preventable, untreated and unmanaged pain.

The standards also recommend ongoing training for health-care providers, and making sure each patient is being constantly assessed for their pain and whether treatments are working.

Accreditation Canada and the Health Standards Organization will make the guidelines available to hospitals and health workers for free, but hope they could one day form the basis of policy and training for health-care professionals.

Dr. Justina Marianayagam, a pediatric resident at B.C. Children's Hospital in Vancouver, said she remembers one lecture on pain management in her four years of training, which lasted about an hour.

"If I think about it from a training standpoint, there's a huge need," said Marianayagam, who experienced chronic pain as a child.

About one in every five children have chronic pain, said Birnie.

"It puts them at increased risk for mental-health issues, substance use and socioeconomic disparities into adulthood," she said. Pain can also effect a child's emotions, their friendships, their family relationships, sleep and how they function physically.

Children who are Black, Indigenous or otherwise experience discrimination and inequity are disproportionately impacted, she said.

"We know that Black children are less likely than white children to receive pain care in North America," Ali explained, even when it comes to injuries like broken arms and appendicitis.

That's why the new guidelines encourage organizations to assess and evaluate the equity of their pain management services for kids.

The newly published standards follow a 2021 action plan by the Canadian Pain Task Force for Health Canada, which called for a more consistent approach to pain management across the country.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. agrees to $27-billion health deal with Ottawa

B.C. agrees to $27-billion health deal with Ottawa
The money for B.C. includes an immediate $273 million to address urgent needs, especially in pediatric hospitals and emergency rooms and to address long wait times for surgeries.

B.C. agrees to $27-billion health deal with Ottawa

MPs to question officials on foreign meddling

MPs to question officials on foreign meddling
The Liberal government has come under pressure in recent weeks to explain what Canada is doing about accusations of Chinese meddling in the last two federal elections following leaks to the media from security sources.

MPs to question officials on foreign meddling

B.C. budget spends more on health, housing

B.C. budget spends more on health, housing
Finance Minister Katrine Conroy says now isn’t the time to start making cuts, so there is more money for things like health care, addiction treatment, foster care, rent control and family supports.

B.C. budget spends more on health, housing

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.
Environment Canada says another winter blast is hammering northwestern parts of the province and is expected to hit the south coast before Thursday. The weather office says 5 to 15 centimetres is expected over higher elevations of the North Shore, west and central sections of the Fraser Valley and along the Sea-to-Sky corridor.

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act
Christopher Ram, 36, pleaded guilty to the March 27, 2022 offence, as well as another indecent act that occurred April 17 at Foster Park, near Kingsway and Boundary Road. 

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP
Attempts to negotiate and deescalate the situation were unsuccessful, and shortly after 11:40 p.m. the male attempted to lower himself from a third story window. He was arrested at ground level with the assistance of a police dog and taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries. 

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP