Migraine is an extremely common condition affecting 28 million
Americans. Fully 1 in every 6 adult women suffers from this malady.
Patients with migraine are frequently seen in the Emergency Room
and Urgent Care Clinic for acute treatment of their headaches.
Headache generally accounts for nearly 3 % of all ER visits,
resulting in almost 3.5 million visits annually.
There currently are no widely used guidelines for the treatment
of patients with headache in the ER or UCC, and reducing the number
of CT scans remains a key goal for administrators in many ER or
urgent care settings. In one study, 35 drugs, alone or in
combination, were used to treat migraine. The most common
medication class used was narcotics, which were used in 25% of the
visits. The next two most commonly used classes were antiemetics
and NSAIDs. Only 5% of patients seen for headache received
headache-specific medications during their visit.
ER and Urgent Care physicians generally have little or no formal
training in treating these patients. Consequently, they often feel
less comfortable ruling out secondary causes of headaches and using
appropriate headache treatment medications and procedures. Since
many patients have received narcotics in previous visits, providers
may view them as drug seekers. Patients seen in ERs and UCCs for
acute treatment of their headaches often report high levels of
dissatisfaction. They often end up in the ER or UCC because they
don t have a formal treatment strategy for their severe
headaches.
Health plans and insurance agencies are often frustrated by the
high cost of fragmented care for patients with headaches. Because
of the environment that most ER and UCC providers operate in, many
unnecessary scans and tests are done because of uncertainty of the
diagnosis and unfamiliarity of the patient. Primary care physicians
are also frustrated by patients with headaches presenting to them
after being seen in the ER or UCC, wanting a refill of their
narcotics that they were given. Many patients don t follow up with
their PCPs and simply keep returning to the ER/UCC for their
treatment.
In short, all involved in the care for patients with headache
are frustrated by the current system. The care for these patients
is clearly not optimal. It doesn t have to be that way. There are a
wide variety of effective treatment options available, but are
underutilized in the acute setting. With these treatment options,
patients no longer have to be treated only with parenteral
narcotics, only to perpetuate the cycle of suboptimal care
described above.
This concise handbook covers all aspects of acute headache care,
including care of the child and adolescent with acute headaches,
treatment of pregnant and breastfeeding women with acute headaches
and appropriate evaluation of secondary headaches. In addition, two
other novel chapters are included: one on caring for older patients
with acute headaches as well as a chapter describing how to ensure
a seamless transition of the patient back to a headache interested
provider.
Representing an important milestone in the care of patients with
headache, this is the first concise handbook available to
exclusively address the issue of headache treatment in the acute
care setting. Including protocols and strategies that can be used
right away, Management of Headaches in Emergency Room and Urgent
Care Settings: Diagnosis and Management provides information about
lesser known, but effective strategies such as greater occipital
nerve blocks that can be easily learned and incorporated in the
acute care setting. It emphasizes the continuity of care that is so
vital to keep headache patients from returning to the ER and UCC
for acute treatment.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!