Pain is a common cause for children seeking care in the Emergency Department (ED). Children with orthopedic injuries often require pain control when seeking emergency care. Despite the high prevalence of ED visits requiring pain control, pain is often poorly assessed and treated in ED settings. Currently, no standard of care exists for the management of this fracture-related pain in children discharged from the ED. Furthermore, discrepancies in analgesia administration to patients of various racial groups seeking emergency care have been documented but are poorly understood. No research currently exists comparing pain severity between upper extremity fractures requiring simple splinting to those treated with sedated reduction and splinting. Furthermore, there is no research regarding the prevalence of significant post-discharge pain nor the differences among ethnic and age groups treated in the ED. Research Questions: What is the prevalence of significant post-discharge pain in children treated for upper extremity fractures? Is there a difference in severity between those children requiring reduction versus simple splinting? Is there a difference in pain severity noted among different ethnic or age groups? Design This is a prospective, un-blinded, observational study that will include patients seeking treatment for an upper extremity fracture.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
300
Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota
Twin Cities, Minnesota, United States
RECRUITINGPain Score
Numeric pain scale from 0 - 10. 10 indicating the worst pain
Time frame: day 2 - 3
Second pain score assessment
Numeric pain scale from 0 - 10. 10 indicating the worst pain
Time frame: 7-8 days after ED discharge
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