Nurse Education in Practice
Volume 10, Issue 1 , Pages 48-51, January 2010

Nursing patients with acute chest pain: Practice guided by the Prince Edward Island conceptual model for nursing

  • Janelle F. Blanchard

      Affiliations

    • Emergency Room Nurse, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 902 368 1004.
  • ,
  • Donna A. Murnaghan

      Affiliations

    • School of Nursing, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
    • Tel.: +1 902 566 0749; fax: +1 902 566 6486.

Accepted 20 March 2009. published online 27 April 2009.

Summary 

Current research suggests that pain is a relatively common phenomenon with 60–90% of patients presenting to emergency departments reporting pain (e.g., chest pain, trauma, extremity fractures and migraine headache) that require treatment [Hogan, S.L., 2005. Patient satisfaction with pain management in the emergency department. Advanced Emergency Nursing Journal 27(4), 284–294]. This article explores the use of conceptual theoretical empirical (C-T-E) framework to guide a senior nursing student in a case study of patient with chest pain. The Middle Range Theory of Pain described by Good [Good, M., 1998. A middle-range theory of acute pain management: use in research. Nursing Outlook 46(3), 120–124] and Melzack’s [Melzack, R., 1987. The short-form McGill pain questionnaire. Pain, 30, 191–197] short form McGill pain questionnaire were applied along with the Prince Edward Island conceptual model (PEICM) for nursing. Results indicate that the nursing student increased her ability to work in partnership, assess relevant and specific information, and identify a number of strategies to help the patient achieve pain control by using a complement of pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions. Moreover, the C-T-E approach provided an organized and systematic theoretical approach for the nursing student to assist a patient in pain control.

Keywords: Conceptual model, Pain, Primary health care, Middle range theory

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PII: S1471-5953(09)00063-8

doi:10.1016/j.nepr.2009.03.010

Nurse Education in Practice
Volume 10, Issue 1 , Pages 48-51, January 2010