Litcius/Paper detail

A scoping review of the epidemiology and treatment of painful procedures in hospitalized neonates: What has changed in the past three decades?

Mariana Bueno, M Rao, Prabhlin Aujla, Charles Victor, Bonnie Stevens

2024European Journal of Pain20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Care of newborns hospitalized in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) includes multiple painful procedures/day. Epidemiologic studies have reported the frequency and nature of procedures and treatment interventions. However, evidence on the changing trends in the nature and frequency of neonatal pain procedures or treatments over time is absent or inconclusive. We aimed to determine the frequency and nature of painful procedures/neonate/day in the NICU. DATABASES AND DATA TREATMENT: statistic. RESULTS: Of 2622 unique citations, 64 full-text articles were reviewed; 23 were included. Six additional studies identified in a previous review, and six publications from reference lists were added, resulting in 35 studies. The mean number of painful procedures/neonate/day was 7.38 (95% CI 5.60, 9.17; range <2 to 17). Although the frequency of painful procedures in more recent studies was reduced, it was not statistically significant (p = 0.16). Painful procedures were more frequent during longer observation periods. Needle-related procedures were most common and did not change over time. Procedure-related treatment was suboptimal and inconsistently reported. CONCLUSIONS: Frequency of painful procedures in the NICU has shown a clinically important decrease but has not significantly changed over time. A paradigm shift moving responsibility from providers to systems in changing pain practices in the NICU is required. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The decrease in the daily frequency of painful procedures in hospitalized neonates might be clinically relevant but is not yet statistically significant. Pain treatment is insufficiently documented and reported. This lack of progress in neonatal care might be a result of the complexity of defining pain and stress; inconsistencies in determining the burden of procedural pain; the influence of barriers and facilitators on practice change; and the focus on an individual rather than system responsibility for pain prevention and treatment.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNeonatal intensive care unitMEDLINEPsychological interventionPediatricsMeta-analysisIntensive care medicineInternal medicinePsychiatryPolitical scienceLawPediatric Pain Management TechniquesPain Management and Opioid UseAnesthesia and Pain Management
A scoping review of the epidemiology and treatment of painful procedures in hospitalized neonates: What has changed in the past three decades? | Litcius