sciphar Volume 5, Issue 1, Page 57-59, 2026
e-ISSN 2830-7259
p-ISSN 2830-7046
DOI

Rissa Maharani Dewi1, Willi Wahyu Timur1, Abdur Rosyid2, Nindita Sari Nastiti2, Dwi Monika Ningrum2, Dimas Widiyanto2
1Pharmacy Professional Education Study Program, Faculty of Pharmacy, Sultan Agung Islamic University, Semarang - 50112, Central Java, Indonesia; 2Bachelor of Pharmacy Programme, Faculty of Pharmacy, Sultan Agung Islamic University, Semarang - 50112, Central Java, Indonesia
Corresponding: rissamaharani@unissula.ac.id (Rissa Maharani Dewi).
Inappropriate prescribing of parenteral analgesics in the emergency department (ED) remains a relevant clinical concern, particularly in patients presenting with mild pain or uncomplicated fever (1). Rational analgesic use is essential to minimize avoidable adverse drug reactions and unnecessary invasive interventions (2). This letter reports findings from an internal audit conducted in the ED of a private hospital in Banjarbaru, Indonesia, which identified a small but consistent proportion of patients receiving parenteral analgesics without clear clinical indication.
The audit employed a retrospective descriptive design. Medical records of all patients attending the ED during the audit period were reviewed to evaluate analgesic prescribing practices. Data collected included patient age, presenting complaint, pain intensity using the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS), type and route of analgesic administered, and documented immediate adverse effects. Inappropriate use was defined as administration of parenteral analgesics in patients with mild pain (NRS 1-3) or uncomplicated fever when oral therapy was feasible (3).
Among the total audited ED visits, approximately 3.6% of patients met the criteria for inappropriate parenteral analgesic use. Three representative cases are summarized to illustrate the pattern observed. A quantitative summary of patient characteristics, clinical indications, pain severity, and NSAID prescribing patterns is presented in Table 1.
Case 1 involved a 17-year-old male presenting with a one-day history of fever and mild headache (NRS 2). Despite the low pain intensity and absence of contraindications to oral medication, intravenous metamizole 500 mg was administered. The patient subsequently developed nausea within two h of treatment.
Case 2 concerned a 24-year-old male who presented with a one-day history of fever without significant pain. Injectable ketorolac 30 mg was administered. Following treatment, the patient reported dizziness and abdominal discomfort.
Case 3 was a 28-year-old female presenting with mild abdominal pain (NRS 1-3). She received injectable ketorolac and later complained of dizziness, without evidence of clinical deterioration or need for parenteral therapy.
These cases exemplify the broader audit findings and suggest a recurring prescribing pattern rather than isolated clinical decisions.
Current guidance from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) recommends oral paracetamol or ibuprofen as first-line therapy for mild pain (NRS 1-3) and uncomplicated fever (4). Parenteral non-steroidal anti-["Table", "Table 1. Quantitative summary of NSAID prescribing audit in the emergency department (n = 384).", "8pt", "1", "false"]inflammatory drugs, such as ketorolac, are indicated primarily for moderate to severe pain or when oral administration is not possible. Similar principles are supported by international pain management literature, which emphasizes stepwise analgesic escalation and route appropriateness to reduce adverse drug events (5).
Audit Variable | Result |
Total patients receiving NSAIDs | 384 patients |
Sex distribution | Male: 201 (53.34%) Female: 183 (47.66%) |
Age group (most frequent) | 17–25 years: 139 patients (36.2%) |
Pain severity (NRS) | Mild pain (NRS 1–3): 178 patients (46.35%) Moderate pain (NRS 4–6): 206 patients (53.65%) |
Most common clinical indication | Fever, unspecified: 180 patients (46.88%) |
NSAID types most frequently prescribed | Metamizole sodium (injection): 112 patients (29.17%) Ketorolac (injection): 80 patients (20.83%) Ibuprofen (oral): 123 patients (32.03%) Mefenamic acid (oral): 58 patients (15.10%) Natrium diclofenac (oral): 11 patients (2.87%) |
Route of administration | Parenteral: 193 patients (50.3%) Oral: 191 patients (49.7%) |
Inappropriate parenteral NSAID use | 7 patients (3.6%) |
Pattern of inappropriate use | Parenteral NSAIDs administered in patients with mild pain (NRS 1–3) |
In this audit, all representative cases were associated with immediate, non-severe adverse effects following parenteral analgesic administration. While the incidence rate of 3.6% appears numerically small, it highlights potentially avoidable patient discomfort and unnecessary exposure to injectable medications. Importantly, the findings do not allow conclusions regarding systemic failure, significant clinical harm, or economic burden, but they do underscore the need for improved adherence to basic analgesic prescribing principles.
Based on these observations, several practical measures may be considered, including reinforcement of routine pain assessment prior to analgesic selection, targeted re-education of ED clinicians on guideline-based analgesic use, and periodic internal audits to monitor prescribing practices.
In conclusion, this internal audit identifies limited but consistent inappropriate use of parenteral analgesics in patients with mild pain or uncomplicated fever in the ED. Although the clinical impact observed was minor, the findings provide contextual insight into everyday prescribing behavior and may support ongoing efforts to promote rational, patient-centered analgesic use in emergency care settings.