Palliative Care: Pain Management for your Patients
Offered By: FutureLearn
Course Description
Overview
Understand pain management with the University of Colorado
Palliative care provides important support for people living with serious or life-limiting illnesses and their family caregivers.
On this five-week course, you’ll develop tools for assessing and managing pain in seriously ill people. One of a series on palliative care from the University of Colorado, the course will give you the knowledge and skills you need to ease distress for people in your care.
Understand the types, causes, and symptoms of pain
Before you can begin developing tools for supporting patients, you need to be able to define their symptoms. The course will start with an introduction to pain and pain assessment.
You’ll learn to identify types of pain and recognise their causative factors. You’ll also examine some of the most common and distressing symptoms, such as loss of appetite, fatigue, delirium, and nausea.
Investigate treatments and therapy for pain
The next phase of the course focuses on the management of these common symptoms of pain. You’ll discover the medication available for treating symptoms, as well as non-medical approaches and therapies.
You’ll be able to use these approaches to help patients and caregivers manage their emotional response to pain and distress.
At the end of the five weeks, you’ll have a toolbox of practical insights, skills, and strategies to draw on when caring for the seriously ill.
This course is primarily designed for healthcare providers working with seriously ill patients and their families. This includes nurses, doctors, pharmacists, and allied health professionals (e.g. social workers, spiritual care providers, mental health professionals, therapists).
It will also be valuable for families, friends, and communities supporting the seriously ill.
Syllabus
- Pain
- Introduction to Pain
- What is Pain?
- Pain Transmission
- Pain Barriers
- Pain Assessment Basics
- Other Things to Know About Pain
- Assessing Pain in the Nonverbal or Cognitively Impaired
- Pain Assessment
- Non-Pharmacological Pain Treatment
- Many Dimensions of Pain
- Integrative Therapy
- Traditional Body-based Therapies
- Nontraditional Body-based Therapies
- Mind Body Therapies
- Topical Therapies
- Non-Pharmacological Pain Treatment Assessment
- Medication Management (including over the counter and non-opioid medicines)
- Easing Pain with Non-Opioids
- What Non-Opioids to Use and When?
- Common Side Effects
- Medication Management Assessment
- Opioids, Safety, and Addiction
- Easing Pain with Opioids
- Opioids in Pill and IV Form
- Changing From One Opioids to Another
- Addiction, Pseudo-Addiction, Physical Dependence, and Tolerance
- Opioid Safety and Addiction Assessment
- Easing Pain: Assessment
- Easing Pain Assessment
Taught by
Jill L
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