Pediatric Pain Management Standard

Designation Number:
HSO 13200
Standard Type:
National Standard of Canada - Domestic
Standard Development Activity:
New Standard
ICS code(s):
11.020.10
Status:
Proceeding to development
SDO Comment Period Start Date:
SDO Comment Period End Date:
Posted On:

Scope:

Scope
The Pediatric Pain Management Standard will address pain management for children in Canada, defined as those from infancy to late adolescence and including healthy children and those with acute and chronic disease. It will cover acute, procedural, post-surgical, and chronic pain management as well as parental and caregiver engagement in pain management.

Project need:

Project Need
In partnership with Solutions for Kids in Pain - SKIP, Health Standards Organization (HSO) is convening a Standards Working Group to develop a Pediatric Pain Management Standard. Pain affects children and families in Canada directly and has a significant indirect impact on the healthcare system. Addressing children’s pain is critical due to its pervasiveness; the degree of suffering it causes children and families; its associated health care avoidance; its risk for opioid misuse, mental illness, and chronic pain in adulthood; and the high costs to the Canadian health system, estimated at $60 billion per year for chronic pain. Although access to effective pain management is a fundamental human right, many Canadian children do not have ready access to quality pain care. Although Canada is a leader in pediatric pain research, this knowledge is not routinely implemented in practice. This standard will facilitate the uptake, use, and implementation of pain research and knowledge in Canadian healthcare settings, to the benefit of children and their families.

Note: The information provided above was obtained by the Standards Council of Canada (SCC) and is provided as part of a centralized, transparent notification system for new standards development. The system allows SCC-accredited Standards Development Organizations (SDOs), and members of the public, to be informed of new work in Canadian standards development, and allows SCC-accredited SDOs to identify and resolve potential duplication of standards and effort.

Individual SDOs are responsible for the content and accuracy of the information presented here. The text is presented in the language in which it was provided to SCC.