Description
The assessment of pain is made unclear both by the patient's difficulty in expressing it and by the heterogeneity of caregivers' knowledge and practices. This training aims to build a common base that allows pain to be assessed and the most appropriate care to be offered.
Who is this training for ?
For whom ?Care executives, health executives, IDE, AS and any other paramedical professional concerned.
Prerequisites
Training objectives
Training program
- Know the pain management legislation
- Acute pain management protocols by teams.
- The four-year pain control plan.
- Priority required practices: prior interview evaluation.
- Presentation of HAS recommendations.
- Presentation of certification measures focused on pain.
- Exercise: Analysis of protocols in small groups.
- Understand the different types of pain
- The physiology and chemistry of pain: perception, transmission, integration, control, effectors.
- The time factor in pain: growth, decay, intermittence, persistence, habituation.
- Acute pain/chronic pain: what specific neurophysiological mechanisms? Specific pain: cancer, dementia, pressure sores, diabetes, fibromyalgia.
- The psychological experience of pain.
- Case study Presentation of concrete clinical cases.
- Improve pain screening and assessment
- Call signs, motor signs and signs of psychological regression linked to pain.
- Some pain screening tools: grids and rods, initial interview of evaluation.
- How to use the tools: Doloplus-2, ECPA, Mobiqual.
- Practical work Handling the tools.
- Understand the need for teamwork
- The importance of daily observation by caregivers.
- The transdisciplinarity of pain assessment and monitoring: prevention, therapeutic education.
- Caring/taking care, does it eliminate pain? Means of personal and institutional resourcing.
- Collective reflection Creation of a sheet of available resources.
- Learn about medicinal and non-drug approaches
- WHO protocols.
- The main families of analgesics and their pharmacokinetics.
- Clinical administration protocols, clinical monitoring, addictive risk.
- Non-drug therapies: sophrology, relaxation, hypnosis.
- Exercise: Workshops to put non-drug techniques into practice and case analysis of drug therapies.