Emergency care providers' perspectives of acute pain assessment and management in the prehospital setting, in the Western Cape, South Africa: A qualitative study

Int Emerg Nurs. 2021 Sep:58:101042. doi: 10.1016/j.ienj.2021.101042. Epub 2021 Jul 29.

Abstract

Introduction: A growing body of evidence suggests that pain knowledge and management are poor, perhaps more so in the prehospital setting. The daily challenges that emergency care providers face in dealing with prehospital pain remain unclear. This study aimed to gain a deeper understanding of acute prehospital pain assessment and management in the Western Cape, South Africa.

Methods: A series of focus group discussions, using a constructivist paradigm and qualitative content analysis were conducted.

Results: The key themes emerging from six focus groups (total 25 emergency care providers) related to the difficulties of assessing pain in this setting, factors affecting clinical reasoning in this (hostile) setting, the realities of prehospital pain care for non-advanced life support practitioners, along with emergency departments' lack of understanding and appreciation of the prehospital environment, and participants' suggestions to improve pain practice.

Conclusion: Several barriers and enablers, some novel, to pain assessment and management in the South African prehospital setting were identified. Our findings provide valuable insight and understanding of the challenges related to pain care prehospital providers face, in other similar prehospital settings, but also to the global body of knowledge on prehospital barriers and enablers of pain assessment and management.

Keywords: Acute pain (MeSH); Ambulances (MeSH); Analgesics (MeSH); Emergency Medical Services (MeSH); Pain Measurement (MeSH); Prehospital.

MeSH terms

  • Acute Pain* / diagnosis
  • Acute Pain* / therapy
  • Emergency Medical Services*
  • Humans
  • Pain Measurement
  • Qualitative Research
  • South Africa