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The prevalence of pain in the emergency department is estimated between 60% and 78%. However, many studies reported oligo analgesia in about half of patient admitted to the emergency department. The delay before effective analgesia is one of the main causes of oligoanalgesia. The use of nurse-directed protocol allows the administration of analgesic upon admission to the emergency department. Nevertheless the need of intravenous access may delay analgesia. The use of oral form analgesics even with immediate release does not allow effective analgesia before 20 min. Pain management protocol in the emergency reception desk of CHU Grenoble Alpes (CHUGA) includes paracetamol that can be combined with oxycodone tablets depending on the pain intensity. For any mono traumatized it is possible to associate self-administer methoxyflurane inhaler. The pain management protocol is already used in the emergency reception desk of CHU Grenoble Alpes.The different analgesics( paracetamol,oral oxycodone, methoxyflurane) are already administered as part of routine care.The use of these different analgesics means would allow a rapid and adapted effectiveness to the pain intensity. However, there are no data on the efficacy and acceptability of such an early multimodal analgesia protocol in the emergency department.
Full description
200 Patients will be included from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm and will receive a multimodal analgesia under the nurse-directed pain management protocol (paracetamol +/- oral oxycodone +/- methoxyflurane) as part of routine medical care.
The pain will be evaluated (Numerical rating scale) prior to the administration and reassessed by a nurse every 5 minutes for 30 minutes and then at 45min and 1 hour after administration of the pain protocol. Satisfaction of patients and caregivers will also be assessed at the end of care.
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Exclusion criteria
Trauma with at least one of the following severity criteria:
Altered level of consciousness (Glasgow score < 15)
Patients who took any analgesic within 4 hours prior to admission (except paracetamol)
Use of nitrous oxide in the hour before admission
Patient requiring an intravenous access at admission (e.g. : open fracture displaced)
Hypersensitivity to one of the molecules of the analgesia protocol
Known pregnant or likely to be pregnant women at the time of inclusion
Subject in an exclusion period from another study
Subjects under tutelage or subjects deprived of liberty
Patients to be unable to understand the purpose of study
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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