Intern Survival Guide Topic

Multimodal pain control.

Inpatient pain control for the new intern: multimodal opioid-sparing first, a CDC-anchored equianalgesic conversion table, a worked IV-hydromorphone-to-oral-oxycodone conversion, and the 25–50% dose reduction for incomplete cross-tolerance. Never for the fentanyl patch, methadone, or buprenorphine.

Reviewed June 2026 · verify against current guidelines

Multimodal First

Build From the Bottom Up

Schedule non-opioids around the clock. Every one is opioid-sparing: less sedation, constipation, and respiratory depression. Reserve opioids for breakthrough and severe pain.

The scheduled foundation

Acetaminophen1000 mg PO or IV q6h. Max 4 g/day; 3 g/day if prolonged use or elderly; 2 g/day in cirrhosis.
NSAIDKetorolac 15 mg IV q6h (analgesic ceiling), max 5 days. Or ibuprofen 400-600 mg PO q6h.
GabapentinoidFor neuropathic pain. Sedation and fall risk; dose for renal function.
OpioidBreakthrough and severe pain only. Lowest effective dose.
Match the agent to the patient: limit acetaminophen in liver disease; avoid NSAIDs in kidney disease, GI bleeding, or heart failure; watch sedation and falls with gabapentinoids.
NSAID non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
Non-Drug Options

Tools Without a Dose

Use alongside every regimen

MoveEarly mobilization, physical therapy, positioning, splinting.
TemperatureIce for acute injury or swelling; heat for muscle spasm.
Mind-bodySlow breathing, guided imagery, music, distraction.
ProceduralTENS, acupuncture, or massage where available.
EnvironmentTreat anxiety, protect sleep, reduce nighttime noise.
EducateSet expectations; reassurance lowers perceived pain.
Non-drug measures are opioid-sparing and have no ceiling. Order them on day one, not as a last resort.
TENS transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation
Opioid Conversion

Convert Opioids Safely

Approximate equianalgesic dose

OpioidIVOral
Morphine10 mg30 mg
OxycodonePO only20 mg
Hydromorphone1.5 mg7.5 mg
Fentanyl100 mcgpoor PO

Worked example: 3 mg/day IV hydromorphone

Estimates only. Never use this table for the fentanyl patch, methadone, or buprenorphine.
PO by mouthmcg micrograms
Don't Get Burned

Where Conversions Kill

High-risk errors

Order naloxone and monitor sedation and respiratory rate after any opioid change.
PCA patient-controlled analgesia

Sources

Verify against current guidelines and local protocol before acting.

  1. CDC Clinical Practice Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Pain, 2022 (oral MME conversion factors).
  2. Arnold R, Weissman DE. Calculating Opioid Dose Conversions. PCNOW Fast Fact #36, 2024.
  3. Bhatnagar M, Pruskowski J. Opioid Equivalency. StatPearls, 2024.
  4. McPherson ML. Demystifying Opioid Conversion Calculations. 2nd ed. ASHP, 2018.
  5. Forestell B, Sabbineni M, Sharif S, et al. Comparative Effectiveness of Ketorolac Dosing Strategies for Emergency Department Patients With Acute Pain. Ann Emerg Med. 2023;82:615-623.
  6. Acetaminophen ceiling per FDA prescribing information.

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Multimodal pain control.
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