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A Study on eAPS: A Postoperative Pain Management Service Utilizing an In-Hospital Telemedicine System

Development and Evaluation of eAPS: A Postoperative Pain Management Service Utilizing an In-Hospital Telemedicine System - A Study on eAPS: A Telemedicine Postoperative Pain Service

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
JPRN
Registry ID
JPRN-UMIN000055777
Enrollment
120
Registered
2024-10-10
Start date
2024-10-15
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2025-07-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Total knee replacement patient

Interventions

The tablet will be used after the surgery is completed and you return to the ward. Always keep a tablet by your bedside and open it when necessary to input data. The self-assessment screen entered by
s mobile terminal and the APS team&#39
s mobile terminal. The APS doctor who receives the patient report sends the APS response to the patient and ward nurses from a mobile device. For example, in the case of poor pain control with an NRS
and immediately examine the patient. conduct. For other non-urgent cases, instruct the nurse to deal with the patient. Tablets will be discontinued once IVPCA is no longer needed during APS rounds.

Sponsors

The Jikei University School of Medicine
Lead Sponsor

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
All

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria:

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria: Patients who are using opioids before surgery or who cannot use tablets

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
pain control, complications from pain treatments, hospital stays, and patient satisfaction

Countries

Japan

Contacts

Public ContactIchiro Kondo

The Jikei University School of Medicine Department of Anesthesiology

ichirok@jikei.ac.jp0334331111

Outcome results

None listed

Source: JPRN (via WHO ICTRP) · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026