AI Article Synopsis

  • Surgical procedures significantly contribute to pain and opioid use worldwide, prompting the creation of various guidelines for postoperative pain management and opioid prescribing.
  • Despite these guidelines, there is a lack of comprehensive integration into standard practices, resulting in ongoing issues with persistent pain and opioid dependence.
  • The review emphasizes the importance of interprofessional collaboration and provides a roadmap for institutions to improve perioperative analgesic strategies and reduce opioid exposure while focusing on patient-centered outcomes.

Article Abstract

Surgical procedures are key drivers of pain development and opioid utilization globally. Various organizations have generated guidance on postoperative pain management, enhanced recovery strategies, multimodal analgesic and anesthetic techniques, and postoperative opioid prescribing. Still, comprehensive integration of these recommendations into standard practice at the institutional level remains elusive, and persistent postoperative pain and opioid use pose significant societal burdens. The multitude of guidance publications, many different healthcare providers involved in executing them, evolution of surgical technique, and complexities of perioperative care transitions all represent challenges to process improvement. This review seeks to summarize and integrate key recommendations into a "roadmap" for institutional adoption of perioperative analgesic and opioid optimization strategies. We present a brief review of applicable statistics and definitions as impetus for prioritizing both analgesia and opioid exposure in surgical quality improvement. We then review recommended modalities at each phase of perioperative care. We showcase the value of interprofessional collaboration in implementing and sustaining perioperative performance measures related to pain management and analgesic exposure, including those from the patient perspective. Surgery centers across the globe should adopt an integrated, collaborative approach to the twin goals of optimal pain management and opioid stewardship across the care continuum.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8001960PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9030333DOI Listing

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