Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz

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Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz. / Boettcher, Michael; Göttler, Susanne.

In: MONATSSCHR KINDERH, Vol. 160, No. 9, 09.2012, p. 887-894.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Boettcher, M & Göttler, S 2012, 'Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz', MONATSSCHR KINDERH, vol. 160, no. 9, pp. 887-894.

APA

Boettcher, M., & Göttler, S. (2012). Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz. MONATSSCHR KINDERH, 160(9), 887-894.

Vancouver

Boettcher M, Göttler S. Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz. MONATSSCHR KINDERH. 2012 Sep;160(9):887-894.

Bibtex

@article{c7dd90aa488c445f87fd09c26447d5d1,
title = "Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz",
abstract = "Objective Pain in hospitalized children is often undertreated. The aim of the study was to assess the current pain management for children in Switzerland. Study design A postal questionnaire was sent to all pediatric units in Switzerland. Result A total of 27 of 45 units replied (60% response). Most units used tools for pain assessment (96%) and had a guideline for pain management (78%). Procedural and postoperative pain are always (100%) treated. Premature infants and children in intensive care units often (> 87%) receive analgesics during invasive procedures. However, only 44% of intensive care units have a guideline for this. Conclusion Benefits of an effective pain management in children are well established. Many measures have been applied in Switzerland. However, there is still room for improvement, e.g., less than half of all intensive care units rely on guidelines for analgesics during invasive procedures.",
author = "Michael Boettcher and Susanne G{\"o}ttler",
year = "2012",
month = sep,
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "160",
pages = "887--894",
journal = "MONATSSCHR KINDERH",
issn = "0026-9298",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Schmerzmanagement bei Kindern in der Schweiz

AU - Boettcher, Michael

AU - Göttler, Susanne

PY - 2012/9

Y1 - 2012/9

N2 - Objective Pain in hospitalized children is often undertreated. The aim of the study was to assess the current pain management for children in Switzerland. Study design A postal questionnaire was sent to all pediatric units in Switzerland. Result A total of 27 of 45 units replied (60% response). Most units used tools for pain assessment (96%) and had a guideline for pain management (78%). Procedural and postoperative pain are always (100%) treated. Premature infants and children in intensive care units often (> 87%) receive analgesics during invasive procedures. However, only 44% of intensive care units have a guideline for this. Conclusion Benefits of an effective pain management in children are well established. Many measures have been applied in Switzerland. However, there is still room for improvement, e.g., less than half of all intensive care units rely on guidelines for analgesics during invasive procedures.

AB - Objective Pain in hospitalized children is often undertreated. The aim of the study was to assess the current pain management for children in Switzerland. Study design A postal questionnaire was sent to all pediatric units in Switzerland. Result A total of 27 of 45 units replied (60% response). Most units used tools for pain assessment (96%) and had a guideline for pain management (78%). Procedural and postoperative pain are always (100%) treated. Premature infants and children in intensive care units often (> 87%) receive analgesics during invasive procedures. However, only 44% of intensive care units have a guideline for this. Conclusion Benefits of an effective pain management in children are well established. Many measures have been applied in Switzerland. However, there is still room for improvement, e.g., less than half of all intensive care units rely on guidelines for analgesics during invasive procedures.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 160

SP - 887

EP - 894

JO - MONATSSCHR KINDERH

JF - MONATSSCHR KINDERH

SN - 0026-9298

IS - 9

ER -