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Pain Management 2016

October 03-04, 2016

Volume 5, Issue 5(Suppl)

J Pain Relief

ISSN: 2167-0846 JPAR, an open access journal

conferenceseries

.com

October 03-04, 2016 Vancouver, Canada

International Conference on

Pain Research & Management

Alibaud Régine et al., J Pain Relief 2016, 5:5(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2167-0846.C1.012

Drug and non-drug conciliation with patient-course process in chronic pain consultation

Alibaud Régine, Metadier De Saint-Denis Alix, Metadier De Saint-Denis Dominique, Ruiz Isabelle

and

Lavaud Katia

Hospital Narbonne, France

Background:

In order to implement a prevention of the iatrogenic risk associated with analgesic and ensure a continuity of the

course of care in the management of pain, experience in drug and non-drug conciliation was initiated at the consultations pain

chronic of the Centre Hospitalier de Narbonne (France) by a pharmacist, a doctor and a nurse. Conciliation is an interactive

and multi-professional approach which, in addition to secure the requirements by preventing errors, promotes the transfer of

information between health actors and opportunity to strengthen the city-hospital link.

Objectives:

Four objectives were investigated: secure drug and non-drug pain management in chronic pain consultations until

home, coordinate hospital and city professionals, educate patient and evaluate conciliation by indicators.

Methodology:

Prospective monocentric study was performed by proactive conciliation of drug and non-drug prescriptions

including clinical pharmacist, doctor, the pain-nurse at the hospital; doctor and pharmacist, in the city.

Results:

25 adult patients were included for two months. Conciliation and intentional divergences were assessed by nine

indicators: CM1: eligible patients/total patients (25/25); CM2: patients with serious medication error/conciliated patients

(1/25); CM3: non-observant patients/conciliated patients (14/25); CM4: patients with adverse drug reactions/conciliated

patients (13/25); CM5: patients with drug treatment optimization (9/25). CM6: patients with non-drug treatment optimization

(20/25); CM7: opioids information/concerned patients (7/7). CM8: satisfied patients/conciliated patients (25/25); and CM9:

information/city pharmacist (9/9).

Conclusion:

Objectives were achieved, and new components emerged: non-drug conciliation, major role of nurse pain,

interactive process of continuity of pain treatment between admission in consultation and return to home. This first drug and

non-drug conciliation increased pain management security and city/hospital links expansion (physiotherapist, sophrologist,

psychotherapist, etc.).

Biography

Alibaud Régine is working as a Pharmacist in Hospital Narbonne, France. He pursed his Diploma in 1979. In 1980, he completed Diploma of Advanced Studies in

Pollutants Toxicology. He obtained State Doctorate degree in Pharmaceutical Sciences in 1983.

regine.alibaud@chnarbonne.fr