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Perioperative Pain Management Summary

Perioperative Pain Management by Richard D. Urman (Assistant Professor, Anesthesiologist and Director of Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Assistant Professor, Anesthesiologist and Director of Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School)

Millions of procedures, surgical and non-surgical, are performed around the world each year. Management of perioperative pain is of great importance to patients, and a critical management issue for physicians and other health professionals who provide perioperative care. Healthcare facilities and national accrediting organizations have established standards surrounding proper management of perioperative pain. There is now an increased burden on every hospital and training program to ensure that healthcare providers understand the essentials of pain management and are able to recognize and treat pain in a timely fashion. Poorly controlled pain leads to patient dissatisfaction and contributes to increased morbidity and mortality, such as myocardial infarction, pneumonia, and emotional effects. Proper management, including appropriate pharmacologic management and regional analgesic techniques, can improve function and shorten length of hospital stay. Patients who are undergoing procedures under sedation or anesthesia need to receive adequate pain relief with drugs or regional anesthetic techniques. In the recovery room following the procedure, the staff taking care of the patient needs to be properly trained to diagnose and treat post-procedural pain. Part of the Oxford American Pain Library, this concise, evidence-based clinical guide serves as a tool for every clinician who wishes to understand the basic mechanisms, pharmacology, invasive and noninvasive treatment modalities, guidelines and development of pain management protocols. The authors address new technologies, chronic pain issues, running an acute pain service, opioid and non-opioid pharmacology (including newly approved drugs), epidural and other regional anesthesia, and special populations such as pediatric patients, the elderly, and patients with a co-existing disease.

Perioperative Pain Management Reviews

This is an excellent overview of acute pain management. The simple, straightforward approach belies the hard work necessary to fulfill the mission of optimal perioperative pain control - just the approach that's needed to help make medical staff better at evaluating and treating surgical pain. * Doody's Notes *

About Richard D. Urman (Assistant Professor, Anesthesiologist and Director of Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Assistant Professor, Anesthesiologist and Director of Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School)

NV: Associate Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut. RDU: Assistant Professor, Anesthesiology and Director, Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Table of Contents

1. Introduction to Acute Pain Management: A Team Approach ; 2. Mechanisms of Pain ; 3. Assessment of Pain ; 4. Pharmacologic Agents: Opioids ; 5. Pharmacologic Agents: Non-opioids ; 6. Regional Anesthesia Techniques ; 7. Medication Delivery Systems ; 8. Complementary and Alternative Medicine ; 9. Chronic Pain Patient and other Co-Existing Conditions ; 10. Special Populations: Pediatric and Elderly Patients ; 11. Obstetric Pain ; 12. Outcomes and Future Directions

Additional information

NLS9780199937219
9780199937219
0199937214
Perioperative Pain Management by Richard D. Urman (Assistant Professor, Anesthesiologist and Director of Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Assistant Professor, Anesthesiologist and Director of Procedural Sedation, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2013-05-23
144
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Perioperative Pain Management