Evaluation of an Intravenous Acetaminophen Protocol in the Emergency Department
Aaron B Deutsch, John D DelBianco, Patrick Fagan, Kimberly Sharpe, Jason Laskosky, Laura Koons, Gillian A Beauchamp, Kenneth D Katz

TL;DR
This study evaluates the safety and effectiveness of intravenous acetaminophen in the Emergency Department, showing it can reduce opioid use.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence on the safety and opioid-sparing effect of an IV acetaminophen protocol in the ED.
Findings
94 patients received IV acetaminophen with no adverse reactions reported.
23.4% of patients received opioids within four hours of IV acetaminophen.
Most patients did not require opioids after IV acetaminophen administration.
Abstract
Background: Acute pain is a leading reason for Emergency Department (ED) evaluation, accounting for nearly half of all ED visits. Therefore, providing effective non-opioid analgesics in the ED is critical. Oral acetaminophen (APAP) is commonly administered in the ED but is limited to patients tolerating oral intake. Intravenous (IV) APAP provides significant pain reduction parenterally. The purpose of this quality assessment project was to evaluate the frequency of opioid use in patients receiving IV APAP, the safety of IV APAP, and compliance with an ED IV APAP protocol. Methods: This study included all patients who received IV APAP in the ED of a tertiary care, level I trauma center, during a three-month period. The protocol required ED patients to be NPO (nil per os), 18 years or older, and administered with a single 1000 mg dose. The adverse reactions within 24 hours post-IV APAP,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnesthesia and Pain Management · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment · Pain Management and Opioid Use
