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Creation of a Novel Recuperative Pain Medicine Service to Optimize Postoperative Analgesia and Enhance Patient Satisfaction
Authors:Brian D. Philips RN   NP  Spencer S. Liu MD  Barbara Wukovits RN  Friedrich Boettner MD  Seth Waldman MD  Gregory Liguori MD  Stephanie Goldberg CNO  Lisa Goldstein  Joanne Melia  Marion Hare  Laura Jasphey LMSW  Sharyn Tondel DNP
Affiliation:Hospital for Special Surgery, 535 East 70th Street, New York, NY 10021 USA
Abstract:
Many patients have difficulty with pain control after transition from patient-controlled analgesia modalities to oral analgesics. The creation of a Recuperative Pain Medicine (RPM) service was intended to bridge this gap in pain management at the Hospital for Special Surgery. Specific goals were to improve patient and staff satisfaction with management of postoperative oral analgesics by improving clinical care, administrative policies, and patient and staff education. Primary outcome measures for improved satisfaction were Press Ganey surveys and staff surveys. From inception in Aug 2007 to Dec 2008, RPM has seen 6,305 patients for discharge planning and education and 997 patients for pain management consultation. Administrative and educational accomplishments have included creation of a patient “Helpline” for emergent phone questions regarding postdischarge home pain medications, a policy for prescribing pain medications for home discharge, patient education booklets, a pain management webpage on the Hospital for Special Surgery website, and direct education of staff. Press Ganey measurements of patient satisfaction increased from 87th percentile up to the 99th percentile among peer institutions since the implementation of RPM. Staff satisfaction was 92% positive regarding the RPM service’s function and patient management. An RPM appears to be an effective means to optimize postoperative pain management after transition off patient-controlled analgesia devices. Further research is needed to ascertain the exact cost–benefit and potential impact on postoperative quality-of-life measurements.
Keywords:orthopedic surgery   pain services   patient satisfaction   postoperative analgesia   postoperative outcomes
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