key: cord-0729582-wds3fqyz authors: Kalala, Brigitte; Ferguson, Daniel; Nizeyimana, Francoise; Thakore, Shefali; Myukiyehe, Jean Paul; Twagirumugabi, Theogene; Nyirigira, Gaston; Banguti, Paulin; O’Brien, Jennifer; McKay, William title: A survey of pediatric postoperative pain management in Rwanda date: 2021-08-04 journal: Can J Anaesth DOI: 10.1007/s12630-021-02082-3 sha: 1290fa6c9be9fab513d615fa9db456b5feaa23f4 doc_id: 729582 cord_uid: wds3fqyz nan Research in sub-Saharan Africa has described shortages of pediatric anesthesia airway equipment, medications, training, and personnel. Previous work by our group has shown postoperative pain management of adults in Rwanda, a low income country (LIC), to be inadequate but improving. 1, 2 Here, we report results of an initial study on the impact of these conditions on postoperative pain in children. With approval of the ethics committees of the Universities of Saskatchewan and Rwanda and of the hospitals, we conducted a prospective observational study from July 2019 to December 2019 of postoperative pain management in children aged 3-16 yr in the teaching hospitals in Kigali and Butare. We obtained consent from parents and assent from children in their preferred language. Participants were invited in the preoperative holding area and followed in the recovery room and ward until postoperative day 2, when the validated Faces Pain Scale -Revised 3 and the International Pain Outcomes Questionnaire (IPOQ) 4 were administered. The latter scale has not been validated in children, but a parent was always present when it was administered by an interviewer. It has been used in LICs. 5 There are no similar pediatric studies in LICs from which to calculate a sample size. We planned on approaching 100 participants, but include data obtained when that number was exceeded because of simultaneous research at two hospitals. We assessed all scale data for normality (Shapiro-Wilk test) and none was Gaussian (P\ 0.001). We calculated 99% confidence intervals (CI) for categorical questions. We approached 105 patients with their parents, and all agreed to participate: 90 in Kigali and 15 in Butare; 28 female, 77 male; median [interquartile range (IQR)] age, 8 [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] yr. They had 81 major surgeries requiring hospital admission and 24 minor day surgeries. By specialty, there were eight otolaryngology, 24 general, 49 orthopedic, 14 plastic, six urology, two neurosurgery, and two others (a bone marrow aspiration and a complex case involving multiple specialties). Twelve had pre-existing pain. The primary outcome, median [IQR] patient's worst pain score in the first 48 hr after surgery, was 6 [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] ; range, 2-10. More than half (58/105) had severe pain with a score of 7 or more. Eighty-one were at risk of severe postoperative pain because of pre-existing pain or major surgery. Only 25/105 (24%) patients were assessed for pain by recovery room staff post-surgery, and of these, only 18 were medicated. All were given pain medication on the surgical or pediatric intensive care ward. Drugs used were combinations of paracetamol, non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and opioids. Overall, paracetamol was used in 90/105 (86%) patients, NSAIDs in 73/105 (70%), and opioids in 43/105 (41%). Seven Item ( patients received only paracetamol, 11 only NSAIDs, and one only an opioid. Other results are found in the Table 1 . As we found in our previous adult study, the worst postoperative pain was high in over half the patients, but the median [IQR] score for satisfaction was also high (8 [7-9]). Postoperative pain was apparently expected by participants and accepted as unavoidable. We postulate that patients and parents were more concerned about getting the surgery done than about pain. This is borne out by a study of 1,626 households with a 99% response rate that found that 6.3% of Rwandan children have a potentially treatable surgical condition. 6 Healthcare is improving rapidly in Rwanda. We expect that the present study will suggest areas for improvement of traditional postoperative pain measures, and that the IPOQ results may inform some new directions for quality improvement. We plan to repeat the study to measure any improvement after four or five years depending on the COVID-19 pandemic status. Surveys of post-operative pain management in a teaching hospital in Rwanda -2013 and 2017 Anaesthesia services in developing countries: defining the problems Validity of four pain intensity rating scales Patients' perception of postoperative pain management: validation of the International Pain Outcomes (IPO) questionnaire Quality of postoperative pain management in Ethiopia: a prospective longitudinal study Estimating pediatric surgical need in developing countries: a household survey in Rwanda GA = general anesthesia IPOQ = International Pain Outcomes Questionnaire; IQR = interquartile range NSAID = non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug RA = regional anesthesia SA = spinal anesthesia Acknowledgements The authors would like to extend their thanks to data collectors Rose Nyinawingeri, Bob Sumayire, and Jean de Dieu Mahoro.Disclosures None.Funding statement We are grateful to the Departments of Anesthesiology of the Universities of Rwanda and Saskatchewan for funding this study, and to the Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society International Education Foundation for providing housing in Kigali for the Canadians.Editorial responsibility This submission was handled by Dr.Stephan K.W. Schwarz, Editor-in-Chief, Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthe´sie.