4.2 Article

Procedural Analgesia in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: A Quality Improvement Initiative

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 15, Pages 1688-1692

Publisher

THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1726121

Keywords

procedures; analgesia; neonate; pain

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By implementing a series of interventions and PDCA cycles, the utilization rate of procedural analgesia was successfully increased from 11% to 40%, and ultimately stabilized at around 75%. Simple interventions can improve and sustain the utilization of procedural analgesia.
Objective Neonates perceive pain which also has adverse long-term consequences. Newborns experience several painful procedures a day. Various methods of analgesia may be used but are underutilized. The SMART aim of this project was to increase the use of procedural analgesia from 11.5 to 75% in 6 months by using quality improvement principles. Study Design After a baseline audit, a root cause analysis was done. Based on this, a series of interventions were done as Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. These included posters on analgesia, display of the pain protocol, orders for analgesia, a written test, small power point presentations on the importance of analgesia, and reminders on the trays used for procedures. At the end of each PDSA cycle, an audit was done to determine the proportion of times analgesia was used. Process indicators were also used when possible. Analysis was done by using the Chi-square test and the paired t -test. Results At baseline 11% of procedures were done after giving analgesia. This significantly improved to 40% at the end of the first PDSA, and 81% after third PDSA. This was sustained at 75% over the next 2 months. Conclusion Procedural analgesia can improve and be sustained by using simple interventions.

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