Treating Sickle Cell Pain like Cancer Pain

  1. Daniel Brookoff, MD, PhD; and
  2. Rosemary Polomano, MSN

    Abstract

    Objective: To assess the effect of a structured analgesic regimen on hospital use by patients with sickle cell disease.

    Intervention: Intravenous and oral controlled-release morphine was used instead of intramuscular meperidine and short-acting oral opioids for the treatment of sickle cell pain.

    Design: Time series in which emergency and admission records for four 6-month periods before and two 6-month periods after the institution of the new analgesic protocol were reviewed.

    Setting: Inner-city university hospital providing care for adults with sickle cell disease.

    Patients: All patients (an average of 50) who used the emergency department or the inpatient medical service for treatment of sickle cell crisis during the study periods.

    Measurements and Main Results: The number of admissions for sickle cell pain decreased by 44%, total inpatient days by 57%, length of hospital stay by 23%, and the number of emergency department visits by 67% after initiation of the morphine protocol. Hospital use remained at these lower levels one year later. Similar declines were seen for a subset of 15 patients who had a history of frequent admissions for sickle cell pain and who used this hospital exclusively and accounted for more than half of the admissions for sickle cell disease.

    Conclusion: A pain-control program modeled on regimens used to treat chronic cancer pain reduced hospital use by adult patients with sickle cell pain.

    Article and Author Information

    • From the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. For current author addresses, see end of text.

    • Requests for Reprints: Daniel Brookoff, MD, PhD, University of Tennessee at Memphis, 877 Jefferson Avenue, Room G-164, Memphis, TN 38103.

    • Current Author Addresses: Dr. Brookoff: Division of Emergency Medicine, The University of Tennessee at Memphis, 877 Jefferson Avenue, Room G-164, Memphis, TN 38103.

      Ms. Polomano: Department of Surgical Nursing, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104.

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