4.0 Article Proceedings Paper

Implementation of pain best practices as part of the spinal cord injury knowledge mobilization network

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPINAL CORD MEDICINE
Volume 42, Issue -, Pages S226-S232

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10790268.2019.1654191

Keywords

Spinal cord injury; Rehabilitation; Implementation; Pain management

Funding

  1. Stan Cassidy Foundation
  2. New Brunswick Health Research Foundation - Rick Hansen Institute
  3. Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation

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Context/objective: The spinal cord injury (SCI) knowledge mobilization network (KMN) is a community of practice formed in 2011 as part of a national best practice implementation (BPI) effort to improve SCI care. This study objective was to determine whether completion and documentation of pain practices could be improved in a neurorehabilitation setting using the KMN implementation approach. Design: Single site, pre?post intervention study. Setting: Neurorehabilitation hospital. Participants: Twenty sequential consenting inpatients with SCI, with retrospective comparative analysis of 50 sequential SCI admissions pre-KMN. Interventions: A local Site Implementation Team (SIT) was formed to develop an implementation plan, including acceptable timeframes for completion and documentation of four specific pain best practices: (1) pain assessment on admission, (2) development of an Inter-Professional Pain Treatment Plan (IPTP), (3) pain monitoring throughout admission, and (4) a pain discharge plan. Outcomes: Provider adherences to pain best practices were the primary outcomes. The secondary outcome was patient satisfaction. Results: Provider adherence for most outcomes exceeded 70% completion within acceptable timeframes, with improvements found for all outcomes as compared to the retrospective cohort. Notably, pain education as part of the IPTP improved from 12% completion to 74%, documenting pain onset from 4.5% to 80% and pain discharge plan from 40% to 74%. Overall, participants were satisfied with their pain management. Conclusions: Pain best practices were more consistently documented after the KMN implementation. Pain practices in all four areas have now been expanded to all inpatient diagnoses using the same forms and framework created in the implementation process.

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