The Quality of Pain Management in German Hospitals
Overview
Public Health
Authors
Affiliations
Background: The Pain-Free Hospital Project was initiated in 2003 with the aim of improving pain management throughout Germany. We assessed the current state of pain management in German hospitals.
Methods: From 2004 to 2006, data were obtained anonymously from 2252 patients who had undergone surgery, and 999 who had been treated non-surgically, in a total of 25 hospitals. They were interviewed about the intensity of pain they had experienced and about the effectiveness of its treatment.
Results: No pain at all was reported by 12.4% of patients who had undergone surgery and by 16.7% of the non-surgically treated patients. Moderate to severe pain at rest was reported by 29.5% of the surgical group and 36.8% of the non-surgical group. More than 50% of the overall group reported pain on movement. 55% of the surgical group, and 57% of the non-surgical group, were dissatisfied with their pain management. Peak pain tended to occur outside normal working hours. No analgesic treatment at all was given to 39% of patients in the non-surgical group, even though they were in pain; the corresponding figure for the surgical group was 15% (a significant difference, p<0.001). Inadequately effective pain management was reported by 45.6% of patients in the non-surgical group and 29.6% in the operative group (again, a significant difference. Cancer patients were treated more often with potent opioids.
Conclusion: Severe postoperative pain is still too common among hospitalized patients, particularly pain that is induced by movement. Patients being treated on non-surgical wards also often suffer severe pain needlessly. Pain management seems to be worse for non-surgical patients (cancer patients excepted) than for surgical patients: waiting times for medication are longer, and ineffective medications are given more often. On the other hand, a number of hospitals provide positive examples of the potential effectiveness of pain management for both surgical and non-surgical patients.
Galal S, El-Barbary R, Madkour D Arch Dermatol Res. 2025; 317(1):307.
PMID: 39853434 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-025-03799-7.
Bergestuen L, Hagen M, Kisa S J Pain Res. 2025; 18():47-59.
PMID: 39807374 PMC: 11725567. DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S483665.
[Health services research in acute pain medicine : Where do we come from in Germany?].
Nestler N, Maier C, Osterbrink J Schmerz. 2024; 39(1):14-22.
PMID: 39505751 PMC: 11785628. DOI: 10.1007/s00482-024-00845-7.
Zhang H, Yang Y, Jiang L, Xu X, Zhang J, Zhang L BMJ Open. 2024; 14(8):e078048.
PMID: 39209503 PMC: 11367387. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-078048.
Wang S, Zhu H, Yuan Q, Li B, Zhang J, Zhang W BMJ Open. 2024; 14(8):e085702.
PMID: 39153773 PMC: 11331832. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085702.