Pain and Addiction Care in the ED
More than 2 million Americans have become dependent on or abused prescription pain pills and street drugs.
Emergency department clinicians are in a unique position to treat acute pain by providing optimal analgesia, educating patients, and combating the opioid epidemic. ACEP seeks to improve acute pain management for patients in the ED and recognizes the need for prompt, safe, and effective pain management. The primary aim of this program is to accelerate the transfer of knowledge about acute pain management and secure appropriate resources to care for patients.
Help Solve This Pervasive Problem
The United States is in the throes of a public health crisis, the opioid epidemic, as more than two million Americans have become dependent on or abused prescription pain pills and street drugs. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in 2017 there were more than 70,000 overdose deaths in the United States, with drug overdose deaths increasing more than four times between 1999 and 2017, thus making it the leading cause of injury-related death nationwide.
Hospitals and emergency departments (EDs) are in a unique position to combat the opioid epidemic by providing optimal analgesia and educating patients. To ensure your hospital ED staff is aligned with best practices and prepared to fight the epidemic, become accredited through the Pain and Addiction Care in the Emergency Department (PACED) program. PACED accreditation ensures quality, patient safety, communication, responsibility and clarity in the management of ED patients suffering from pain and addiction.