MétaCan
← tous les travaux

Procedural Pain Management for Neonates Using Nonpharmacological Strategies

2011· review· en· 89 citations· W1544865041 sur OpenAlex· 10.1097/anc.0b013e318229aa76

Pourquoi ce travail est-il dans la base ?

Une base qui oublie comment elle a trouvé un travail ne peut pas être vérifiée. Voici les voies qui ont admis celui-ci.

Affiliation canadienneUne personne signataire a déclaré un établissement canadien. C'est la seule voie dont dispose la base habituelle.

Le tri à trois modèles

les 1 000 travaux triés →

Les trois modèles l'ont jugé hors champ.

strate : aff_core · poids de sondage : 5595.24 (l'échantillon est stratifié ; tout taux calculé sans le poids est faux)
Claude Opus 4.8OUT
genre : empirical
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

Clinical review of nonpharmacological strategies for neonatal procedural pain; the object is pain management.

GPT-5.6 (high)OUT
genre : conceptual
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

The review concerns pain-management strategies for neonates, not evidence-synthesis methodology.

Grok 4.5OUT
genre : empirical
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

Clinical review of nonpharmacological neonatal procedural pain management.

Résumé

This is the second of a 2-part series to provide an overview of our current level of knowledge related to nonpharmacological strategies to diminish the pain associated with commonly performed procedures in the NICU. In our first article we discussed the prevalence of repeated pain exposure in the NICU and the importance of nonpharmacological strategies specifically containment or facilitated tucking, swaddling, positioning, nonnutritive sucking, and sweet solutions. These strategies are generally nurse-driven and we believe their importance has been underutilized. In this article we will emphasize the importance of maternal presence as a mediator for pain relief. The efficacy of breastfeeding, maternal skin-to-skin care (often referred to as kangaroo care), and multisensorial stimulation such as auditory and olfactory recognition will be the primary focus of our discussion. In addition, although primarily mother-driven, these strategies are ultimately nurse-enabled, thus the importance of this connection cannot be under appreciated with respect to successful implementation in the NICU.

Conservé avec la notice de tri, où il sert de preuve aux étiquettes ci-dessus.

La notice

Revue
Advances in Neonatal Care
Thématique
Infant Development and Preterm Care
Domaine
Medicine
Établissements canadiens
McGill University
Organismes subventionnaires
Mots-clés
MedicineBreastfeedingPacifierPain managementNeonatal nursingMEDLINENursingIntensive care medicinePhysical therapyNeonatal intensive care unitPediatrics
Résumé présent dans OpenAlex
oui