Assessment tools, WHO analgesic ladder, multimodal analgesia, opioid safety, and GCC-specific considerations
WHO LadderMultimodal AnalgesiaOpioid SafetyNeuropathic Pain
Definition of Pain (IASP 2020)
"An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage."
Key update (2020): Pain is ALWAYS subjective. A patient's report of pain is the gold standard — it does not require objective evidence of tissue damage. Pain exists even if no cause is found.
Types of Pain
Type
Mechanism
Character
Examples
Nociceptive — somatic
Tissue damage activating nociceptors
Aching, throbbing, well-localised
Fracture, surgical wound, arthritis
Nociceptive — visceral
Hollow organ distension/ischaemia
Cramping, colicky, poorly localised, referred
Renal colic, bowel obstruction, MI
Neuropathic
Nerve damage or dysfunction
Burning, shooting, electric shock, allodynia, hyperalgesia
PHN, diabetic neuropathy, sciatica
Nociplastic
Altered nociception without clear tissue damage
Widespread, variable, associated with sensitisation
Fibromyalgia, IBS, chronic widespread pain
Pain Assessment Tools
Tool
Use
How
NRS (Numerical Rating Scale)
Adults able to self-report
0 = no pain, 10 = worst imaginable
VAS (Visual Analogue Scale)
Adults; research settings
10cm line; patient marks position
Wong-Baker FACES
Children ≥3 years; some adults
6 faces from happy (0) to crying (10)
Abbey Pain Scale
Dementia; non-verbal adults
Observational: vocalisation, facial, body language, behaviour change, physiological, physical
CPOT (Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool)
Intubated/ICU patients
4 domains: facial expression, body movement, muscle tension, compliance with ventilator
FLACC
Neonates/infants/preverbal children
Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability — 0–10
Comprehensive Pain Assessment: SOCRATES
Site — where is the pain?
Onset — when did it start? sudden or gradual?
Character — burning, stabbing, aching, throbbing?
Radiation — does it spread anywhere?
Associations — nausea, vomiting, numbness?
Time — constant or intermittent? worse at certain times?
Multimodal analgesia = combining drugs with different mechanisms to achieve better pain control with lower doses of each drug, reducing side effects. Opioid-sparing is the goal.
Opioid Side Effects — CONS Mnemonic
C — Constipation (tolerance does NOT develop — prescribe laxatives from day 1)
O — Obtundation (sedation, altered consciousness)
N — Nausea and vomiting (particularly on initiation)
S — Sweating (and pruritus, dry mouth)
+ Respiratory depression — most dangerous; monitor respiratory rate and sedation level
Opioids have limited efficacy in chronic non-cancer pain; escalation often unhelpful
Physical activity and rehabilitation are cornerstones
Opiophobia in GCC Clinical Practice
Opiophobia — excessive fear of prescribing opioids — is prevalent among GCC clinicians and patients, leading to undertreated pain, particularly in cancer, post-operative, and palliative settings.
Cultural and religious attitudes may associate opioids with addiction or loss of consciousness
Nurses should advocate for adequate analgesia as a patient right
WHO guidance emphasises adequate pain relief as an ethical and human rights obligation
Education programmes on opioid safety vs opioid phobia are needed
Controlled Drug Regulations in GCC
DHA (Dubai), SFDA (Saudi Arabia), MOH various GCC countries — strict controlled substance regulations
Opioids require specific prescriber licensing (Triplicate/special prescription forms)
Storage: double-locked controlled drug cupboard; two-nurse checking system for administration
Wastage must be witnessed and documented by two registered nurses
Patient-owned opioids: hospital policy governs whether patients may self-administer
Import of personal opioid medications requires prior DHA/MOH approval for travellers
Ramadan and Pain Management
Islamic scholars and GCC health authorities confirm: IV and IM medications given for therapeutic purposes do NOT break the Ramadan fast. This includes opioids, analgesics, and IV fluids.
Oral medications are generally considered to break the fast — some scholars allow oral medications with medical necessity
Suppository analgesia — some scholars consider this acceptable; others disagree — patient should consult their religious authority
Nurse's role: provide accurate information; facilitate patient's choice; never withhold necessary analgesia
High-Yield Exam Points
IASP 2020 definition: pain is always SUBJECTIVE — self-report is gold standard
CPOT for intubated ICU patients; FLACC for neonates; Abbey for dementia; FACES for children
Multimodal = opioid-sparing = better pain control with fewer side effects
Constipation is the ONE opioid side effect tolerance does NOT develop to
Common Exam Traps
Monitor SEDATION before respiratory rate — sedation is the earlier warning sign
Naloxone duration (30–90 min) is SHORTER than most opioids — re-narcotisation is possible
Background PCA infusion INCREASES respiratory depression risk — generally avoided
NSAIDs are CONTRAINDICATED in renal failure, active GI ulceration, severe asthma
GCC Clinical Practice Insights
DHA Controlled Drug Handling Requirements +
DHA regulations require controlled drugs (including opioids) to be stored in a double-locked cupboard, with a separate register. Each administration must be witnessed by two registered nurses. Discrepancies must be reported immediately to the nurse in charge. All wastage must be witnessed, documented with both nurses' signatures, and disposed of per DHA protocol.
The Saudi Food and Drug Authority (SFDA) controls all narcotics and psychotropic substances. Opioid prescribing requires a licensed prescriber with narcotics prescribing authority. Special prescription forms are required. Hospitals must maintain strict narcotics registers with monthly reconciliation submitted to the SFDA.
Cancer Pain and Palliative Care in GCC +
Palliative care services are growing in the GCC, but opioid availability for cancer pain remains a challenge in some settings. The WHO identifies opioid access as a global health priority. Nurses working in oncology and palliative care settings in the GCC should advocate for adequate analgesia and be familiar with morphine equivalency calculations for opioid rotation.
Post-Operative Pain Management in GCC Hospitals +
Acute Pain Services (APS) are established in most large GCC hospitals. ERAS protocols incorporating multimodal analgesia (paracetamol + NSAIDs + regional blocks + minimal opioids) are increasingly standard. Nurse-led PCA management with standardised observation protocols (RR, SpO₂, sedation score) is well-established in JCI-accredited facilities.
Practice MCQs
Q1. A patient in the ICU is intubated and sedated following abdominal surgery. Which pain assessment tool is most appropriate?
Correct answer: B — CPOT is validated for intubated ICU patients who cannot self-report. It assesses 4 behavioural domains: facial expression, body movements, muscle tension, and compliance with the ventilator. NRS requires verbal response; FACES requires visual ability; Abbey is designed for dementia patients.
Q2. A patient on a morphine PCA develops increasing sedation with RR of 10/min and SpO₂ 90%. What is the PRIORITY action?
Correct answer: C — This patient has opioid-induced respiratory depression (RR <8 is critical but 10 + SpO₂ 90% with sedation = emergency). Stop opioid immediately, apply O₂, administer naloxone 0.4mg IV, call for help. Sedation is an early warning sign — once SpO₂ drops, act immediately.
Q3. Which drug class is recommended as first-line treatment for diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain?
Correct answer: C — Pregabalin (α2δ calcium channel blocker) and duloxetine (SNRI) are both first-line evidence-based treatments for diabetic neuropathic pain per NICE and international guidelines. Amitriptyline is also first-line. NSAIDs and opioids have minimal efficacy in pure neuropathic pain.
Q4. Regarding PCA morphine, which statement is correct?
Correct answer: B — Only the patient should activate the PCA. This is the fundamental safety mechanism — the patient cannot press the button if they are too sedated, preventing overdose. Background infusions increase risk. Lockout is 5–8 min. Sedation score must be monitored, not just RR.