Persisting pain in children : important information for policy-makers, policymakers and medicines regulatory authorities, hospital managers, health insurance managers
These guidelines have been developed to support countries to relieve pain in their paediatric populations. They address persisting pain in children caused by conditions such as cancer, HIV/AIDS, sickle-cell disease, burns, trauma, and phantom limb pain. Recommendations, developed following a careful and transparent appraisal of available evidence, are presented for the pharmacological treatment of mild, moderate and severe pain. The guidelines include chapters on the various systems used to classify pain and on the evaluation of pain, which reviews the available tools for routine pain measurement in children. Provision of sustainable pain relief within health care systems is covered in a separate chapter.--Publisher description.
CHRONIC PAINCHEMOTHERAPYPAIN_TREATMENT
RELEASED2012
PUBLISHERna
LENGTH275
LANGUAGEEN
Persisting pain in children : important information for policy-makers, policymakers and medicines regulatory authorities, hospital managers, health insurance managers
These guidelines have been developed to support countries to relieve pain in their paediatric populations. They address persisting pain in children caused by conditions such as cancer, HIV/AIDS, sickle-cell disease, burns, trauma, and phantom limb pain. Recommendations, developed following a careful and transparent appraisal of available evidence, are presented for the pharmacological treatment of mild, moderate and severe pain. The guidelines include chapters on the various systems used to classify pain and on the evaluation of pain, which reviews the available tools for routine pain measurement in children. Provision of sustainable pain relief within health care systems is covered in a separate chapter.--Publisher description.
Persisting pain in children : important information for policy-makers, policymakers and medicines regulatory authorities, hospital managers, health insurance managers by World Health Organization - WordSea