2019
DOI: 10.33545/surgery.2019.v3.i4h.282
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Knowledge of postoperative pain management among nurses in a tertiary hospital Uttara Kannada, Karnataka

Abstract: Background: POP management, like other aspects of healthcare, is a teamwork. In most health-care settings, nurses constitute the biggest health workforce and have round the clock contact with patients. Many a time knowledge among nursing staff also is inadequate so that their practices and decisions cannot be relied on. So it becomes important to analyse the scenario in a scientific way. Method: This was a cross-sectional study done on Nursing staff working in tertiarty hospital attached to KRIMS for a period … Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
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“…[15] The findings from this study revealed overall fair knowledge about postoperative pain management among the nurses. In 2019, Tinaikar and Anuradha [16] carried out a crosssectional study on nursing staff working in a tertiary hospital attached to KRIMS, India, for a period of 2 months. An adapted version of the Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain (KASRP) instrument was used to test the knowledge of nurses, and found that 64% nurses had adequate knowledge on postoperative pain management, but suggested that the knowledge level need to be improved upon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…[15] The findings from this study revealed overall fair knowledge about postoperative pain management among the nurses. In 2019, Tinaikar and Anuradha [16] carried out a crosssectional study on nursing staff working in a tertiary hospital attached to KRIMS, India, for a period of 2 months. An adapted version of the Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain (KASRP) instrument was used to test the knowledge of nurses, and found that 64% nurses had adequate knowledge on postoperative pain management, but suggested that the knowledge level need to be improved upon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An adapted version of the Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain (KASRP) instrument was used to test the knowledge of nurses, and found that 64% nurses had adequate knowledge on postoperative pain management, but suggested that the knowledge level need to be improved upon. [16] In the same year, a study [17] was carried out on nurses' knowledge regarding postoperative pain management in a hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan. The study included nurses working at the bedside in postoperative units of the hospital.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%