Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Melt Your Job Stress Away - January 2014 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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Page 59 P A I N C O N T R O L LESS IS MORE Current pain control methods should aim at minimizing the overall use of opioids and focus on shortacting versions of the drugs when they're needed. Stop Overusing Opioids Your anesthesia providers You need to manage or recovery room nurses post-op pain, not likely have had conversa- eliminate it completely. Ashish Sinha, MD, PhD, DABA tions with patients that Philadelphia, Pa. went something like this: "I'm in agony. Give me the strongest pain meds you've got." "But you might feel nauseous. You might throw up. You might be constipated." "I don't care. Solve my pain now. Please." It's understandable that patients in severe pain tend to focus solely on the source of their discomfort, which in turn causes anesthesia providers, surgeons and recovery room staffs to do all they can to lower pain scores to acceptable levels. Additionally, patients often

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