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Children very often experience multiple painful procedures in the course of their emergency department visit, as a part of investigation and treatment. The pain associated with these procedures can cause both long and short-term sequelae. Minimizing procedure-related pain should be a routine part of emergency department care for children.

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Key Resources 

Bottom Line Recommendations: Procedural Pain (2022)

Bottom Line Recommendations: Procedural Pain (2022)

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Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Evidence Repository: Procedural pain

Evidence Repository: Procedural pain

Download

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Evidence repositories are collections of best available resources and evidence (clinical guidelines, peer reviewed literature, systematic reviews, etc.), collated by our knowledge synthesis team and content advisors. This evidence repository is not intended to be an exhaustive list of resources for a topic, but rather a curated list of current, evidence-based resources, based on expert consensus of relevance and usability for a general emergency department setting. We search databases (Cochrane Library, PubMed, TRIP Database) and web search engines (Google, Google Scholar) to locate evidence. Additionally, hospital websites are browsed for guidance documents, such as clinical practice guidelines (CPG) for healthcare professionals.
Every effort is made to identify resources that are open access (i.e. publicly available, free of charge, not requiring a subscription).
More information about the creation of our evidence repositories can be found at https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28537762/ 

VIDEO: How to help when your child needs a needle poke  (2019)

VIDEO: How to help when your child needs a needle poke

Visit

Needle pokes are one of the most common sources of pain for children seeking emergency medical care. Needle pokes may be used during healthcare visits to collect blood, deliver medication and fluids, or to numb certain body parts whil

Infographic: How to Help When Your Child Needs to Get a Needle Poke  (2019)

Infographic: How to Help When Your Child Needs to Get a Needle Poke

Visit

ECHO, ARCHE & TREKK

ECHO, ARCHE & TREKK

Needle pokes are one of the most common sources of pain for children seeking emergency medical care. Needle pokes may be used during healthcare visits to collect blood, deliver medication and fluids, or to numb certain body parts while stitching, for e

Recommandations de base: Douleur procédurale (2022)

Recommandations de base: Douleur procédurale (2022)

Visit

Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Bottom line recommendations for the treatment and management of procedural pain - French. Version 3.0 published online December 8, 2022.

Bottom Line Recommendations: Procedural Pain (2022)

Bottom Line Recommendations: Procedural Pain (2022)

Download

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Recommandations de base: Douleur procédurale (2022)

Recommandations de base: Douleur procédurale (2022)

Visit

Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Bottom line recommendations for the treatment and management of procedural pain - French. Version 3.0 published online December 8, 2022.

Evidence Repository: Procedural pain

Evidence Repository: Procedural pain

Download

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Drs. Samina Ali, Amy Drendel, Corrie Chumpitazi, Naveen Poonai

Evidence repositories are collections of best available resources and evidence (clinical guidelines, peer reviewed literature, systematic reviews, etc.), collated by our knowledge synthesis team and content advisors. This evidence repository is not intended to be an exhaustive list of resources for a topic, but rather a curated list of current, evidence-based resources, based on expert consensus of relevance and usability for a general emergency department setting. We search databases (Cochrane Library, PubMed, TRIP Database) and web search engines (Google, Google Scholar) to locate evidence. Additionally, hospital websites are browsed for guidance documents, such as clinical practice guidelines (CPG) for healthcare professionals.
Every effort is made to identify resources that are open access (i.e. publicly available, free of charge, not requiring a subscription).
More information about the creation of our evidence repositories can be found at https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28537762/ 

VIDEO: How to help when your child needs a needle poke  (2019)

VIDEO: How to help when your child needs a needle poke

Visit

Needle pokes are one of the most common sources of pain for children seeking emergency medical care. Needle pokes may be used during healthcare visits to collect blood, deliver medication and fluids, or to numb certain body parts whil

Infographic: How to Help When Your Child Needs to Get a Needle Poke  (2019)

Infographic: How to Help When Your Child Needs to Get a Needle Poke

Visit

ECHO, ARCHE & TREKK

ECHO, ARCHE & TREKK

Needle pokes are one of the most common sources of pain for children seeking emergency medical care. Needle pokes may be used during healthcare visits to collect blood, deliver medication and fluids, or to numb certain body parts while stitching, for e


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