About this episode
Effective nursing care for a child in pain requires individualized assessment using age-appropriate tools and a multimodal management approach that combines medication with behavioral strategies.1. Assessment: The QUESTT PrincipleAccurate assessment is the foundation of pain management. The text highlights the QUESTT framework as a key guide:• Question the child.• Use a reliable, valid pain scale.• Evaluate behavior and physiologic changes.• Secure parental involvement.• Take the cause of pain into account.• Take action.Choosing the Right Tool:• Infants & Non-verbal: Rely on behavioral and physiologic indicators (facial expressions, crying, heart rate, oxygen saturation) and scales like NIPS or FLACC.• Toddlers to Teens: Move toward self-report tools. Use FACES (ages 3+) or Numeric scales (ages 5+).• Crucial Myth-Busting: Nurses must recognize that newborns do feel pain, and a child who is playing or sleeping may still be in significant pain.2. Management: A Multimodal ApproachTreatment should be tailored to the child's developmental level and the intensity of the pain.• Non-Pharmacologic: These are essential for reducing anxiety and pain perception. ◦ Cognitive/Behavioral: Distraction, relaxation, guided imagery, and positive self-talk. ◦ Biophysical: Heat/cold application, massage, and nonnutritive sucking with sucrose for infants.• Pharmacologic: Involves the use of analgesics (opioids/non-opioids), adjuvants, and anesthetics.3. The Nurse’s RoleBeyond administration, the nurse acts as a safety monitor and advocate.• Procedural Pain: Minimize trauma by using topical anesthetics, therapeutic hugging, and preparing the child ahead of time.• Monitoring: Continually assess vital signs (specifically for respiratory depression) and watch for common opioid side effects like constipation and pruritus (itching)