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Administering
Articles About Administering
Your Administering Questions Answered
Our team of palliative care experts is ready to answer your questions about Administering
If your mother was receiving regular pain medication at home, the same dosage needs to continue in hospital. It’s rare that a pain medication regimen is stopped altogether and given just "as needed" (what health care providers call “prn”).
One of two different things may be happening. Your mother may in fact be getting medications just as needed (prn), or she may be getting regular pain medication in a way you’re not aware of, and also getting additional doses as needed.
It’s important to ask the health care team to clarify which of these is happening. If your mother is in pain, ask the health care team about placing her on the dose she was using before being admitted, if that dosage in fact controlled her pain. If it didn’t, then her medication regimen needs to be reassessed.
If your mother is experiencing pain, you need to meet with the health care team to express your concern. You have a right to advocate for your mother if her pain is not being controlled.
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This protocol supports the practice of administering one or more medications via Continuous Subcutaneous Infusion (CSCI) delivered by Computerized Ambulatory Drug Delivery (CADD®) pump to patients/clients receiving care in Tertiary Hospice...
Calgary Region Palliative Care Program produced this protocol for the purpose of effectively managing severe incident pain.
...Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (WRHA) procedure for providing an evidenced-based standard approach to establishing a subcutaneous route for medication and/or fluid administration in non-emergent situations in the home.