Paramedic care for back pain : a review of Australian and New Zealand clinical practice guidelines

Simon P. Vella, Qiuzhe Chen, Chris G. Maher, Paul Simpson, Michael S. Swain, Gustavo C. Machado

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Back pain is one of the most common reasons for a person to call an ambulance service, yet how ambulance services manage back pain has not been described. Methods: Australian-state and New Zealand ambulance service jurisdiction websites were searched between 25th January to 3rd February 2022. Pain management guidelines were included where no specific back pain guideline was found. Identified guidelines were screened, appraised using AGREE II tool and recommendations on pharmacological and non-pharmacological management of back pain, ambulance transport and alerting features were extracted, summarised, and compared to two primary care guidelines. Results: Nine guidelines were identified including four back pain and 5 pain management guidelines. All four back pain guidelines recommend paracetamol or ibuprofen as analgesic options to manage back pain. These guidelines recommend transport to the emergency department when there are alerting features for serious disease, lack of pain control or where the patient is unable to ambulate. 2 out of 9 ambulance guidelines were recommended for use in their existing format following quality appraisal using AGREE II tool. Ambulance guidelines scored significantly lower than primary care guidelines for back pain. Conclusion: Ambulance service guidelines for back pain recommend advice, reassurance, paracetamol and referral to primary care.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)354-360
Number of pages7
JournalAustralasian Emergency Care
Volume25
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

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