AI Article Synopsis

  • Pain is a significant and debilitating symptom affecting quality of life, with various causes and classifications such as acute and chronic, necessitating effective management strategies.
  • The American College of Physicians (ACP) emphasizes the importance of sound, evidence-based performance measures for pain management to enhance care quality, but acknowledges the overwhelming number of low-value measures that burden healthcare providers.
  • The ACP's Performance Measurement Committee (PMC) evaluates and recognizes high-quality pain-related performance measures, ultimately reviewing six relevant measures and proposing a new concept to address gaps in care for improved patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Pain is a debilitating symptom generally caused by injuries or various conditions. It can be acute, subacute, or chronic and can have a significant impact on a patient's quality of life. The goal of managing pain is to relieve or reduce suffering and improve patient functioning. Several performance measures that address the treatment of pain are used in payment, public reporting, or accountability programs. The American College of Physicians (ACP) embraces performance measurement as a means to improve quality of care. ACP believes that a performance measure must be methodologically sound and evidence-based to be considered for inclusion in payment, accountability, or reporting programs. However, a plethora of performance measures that provide minimal or no value to patient care have inundated physicians, practices, and systems with the burden of collecting and reporting data. ACP's Performance Measurement Committee (PMC) reviews performance measures using a validated process to recognize high-quality performance measures, address gaps and areas for improvement in performance measures, and help reduce reporting burden. There is a need for a higher standard for a performance measure when reputation and reimbursement are on the line. This paper aims to present a review of current performance measures for pain to inform physicians, payers, and policymakers in their selection and use of performance measures. The PMC reviewed 6 performance measures for pain relevant to internal medicine physicians, of which 3 were considered valid at their intended levels of attribution ("Use of Imaging for Low Back Pain," "Use of Opioids at High Dosage in Persons Without Cancer," and "Use of Opioids From Multiple Providers in Persons Without Cancer"). This paper also proposes a performance measure concept to address a quality-of-care gap based on the current clinical guideline from ACP and the American Academy of Family Physicians, "Nonpharmacologic and Pharmacologic Management of Acute Pain From Non-low Back, Musculoskeletal Injuries in Adults."

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.7326/ANNALS-24-00773DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

performance measures
36
performance
14
performance measure
12
measures
9
american college
8
college physicians
8
measures address
8
performance measurement
8
measures pain
8
"use opioids
8

Similar Publications

Sternum drop as a kinematic measure of trip recovery performance.

J Biomech

January 2025

Grado Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Virginia Tech, 250 Durham Hall (0118), 1145 Perry Street, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA. Electronic address:

Deficient trip recovery kinematics have been implicated in many trip-induced falls. Three key requisites for successful trip recovery include limiting trunk flexion, maintaining adequate hip height to enable repeated stepping, and completing recovery steps to extend the base of support. The purpose of this study was to evaluate sternum drop as a new measure of trip recovery performance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A novel LC-MS/MS assay for low concentrations of creatinine in sweat and saliva to validate biosensors for continuous monitoring of renal function.

J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci

December 2024

Clinical Laboratory, Catharina Hospital Eindhoven, Eindhoven 5623 EJ, The Netherlands; Department of Biomedical Engineering, Chemical Biology, Eindhoven University of Technology, Groene Loper 3, Eindhoven 5612 AE, The Netherlands.

Monitoring of kidney function traditionally relies on plasma creatinine concentrations, necessitating invasive blood draws. Non-invasively obtainable biofluids, such as sweat and saliva, present a patient-friendly alternative with potential for continuous monitoring. This study focusses on developing and validating a novel Liquid Chromatography- tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) assay as a reference test for measuring low creatinine concentrations in sweat and saliva.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Anterior chamber air injection (ACAI) is a surgical technique used to decrease the occurrence of postoperative intraocular lens (IOL) haptic dislocation following phacovitrectomy with gas/air tamponade. The impact of this technique on IOL stability remains uncertain, prompting the design of this study to investigate further.

Methods: This study included 51 eyes of 51 patients who underwent phacovitrectomy with gas/air tamponade.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Fixed dose combination (FDC) dolutegravir (DTG) plus rilpivirine (RPV) is an approved antiretroviral treatment regimen for people with HIV. The steady-state pharmacokinetics (PK) of FDC DTG+RPV in hemodialysis (HD) has not been previously studied.

Design: We performed a single-center, prospective evaluation of the steady-state PK of FDC DTG +RPV in 4 adults without HIV either requiring HD and in 4 matched participants with normal renal function.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Evaluate the accuracy and reliability of various generative artificial intelligence (AI) models (ChatGPT-3.5, ChatGPT-4.0, T5, Llama-2, Mistral-Large, and Claude-3 Opus) in predicting Emergency Severity Index (ESI) levels for pediatric emergency department patients and assess the impact of medically oriented fine-tuning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!