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Abdominal Pain CPI

Clinical scenario

Patients presenting to the ED with abdominal pain make up about 5% of all attenders. Previous studies have shown poor agreement between the initial ED clinicians assessment and the final clinical diagnosis. Most frequently the cause is benign and/or self-limited, but more serious causes may require urgent intervention.

Audit question

Is abdominal pain managed appropriately according to best practice guidelines?

Method

Retrospective audit
Sample: 30-50 Emergency Department patient records

Criteria
Inclusions: Patients presenting with abdominal pain

Exclusions: Patients presenting with other medical conditions

Audits

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1st August 2007

1st December 2007

1st April 2008

1st August 2008

1st December 2008

1st April 2009

1st August 2009

1st December 2009

1st April 2010

1st August 2010

1st December 2010

1st April 2011

1st August 2011

1st December 2011

1st April 2012

1st August 2012

1st December 2012

Show Results Over Time

Results

 
Date Patients Measured Results Standard Regional avg.
01st December 2008 Patients attending the ED with abdominal pain Management of the pateints according to the criteria Pain relief given within 20 minutes of arrival if appropriate 100 % 100 %
Pregnancy test in all females of child bearing age or known confirmed pregnancy documented 100 % 57 %
Abdominal examination documented 100 % 100 %
Pain score on arrival 100 % 91 %
Pain relief appropriate to pain score 100 % 37 %

Comments

Significant improvements in timely pain relief, and pain scoring, however decline in pregnancy testing which is down 14%, and appropriateness of pain relief, down 36%. With only 2 criteria achieving target, there is still significant scope for improvement.

Audit Bottom Line

Scope for improvement of appropriate pain management, and pregnancy testing in relevant patients.

Record created on 31st December 2005 by