Systematic pain assessment using an observational scale in nursing home residents with dementia: exploring feasibility and applied interventions.
@article{Zwakhalen2012SystematicPA,
title={Systematic pain assessment using an observational scale in nursing home residents with dementia: exploring feasibility and applied interventions.},
author={Sandra M G Zwakhalen and Charlotte E van't Hof and Jan P. H. Hamers},
journal={Journal of clinical nursing},
year={2012},
volume={21 21-22},
pages={
3009-17
}
}AIMS AND OBJECTIVES
To investigate the feasibility of regular pain assessment using an observational scale in nursing home residents with dementia and; determine interventions applied after diagnosing possible pain. [] Key MethodMETHODS
Data were collected during a 6-week period (August-September 2009) where pain was measured twice a week among 22 residents of a psychogeriatric nursing home ward, using the pain assessment using an observational scale scale.
45 Citations
The impact of a pain assessment intervention on pain score and analgesic use in older nursing home residents with severe dementia: A cluster randomised controlled trial.
- MedicineInternational journal of nursing studies
- 2018
Pain Intervention for people with Dementia in nursing homes (PID): study protocol for a quasi-experimental nurse intervention
- MedicineBMC Palliative Care
- 2017
Clinically significant findings will be expected that will help reduce suffering in the sense of “total pain” for people with dementia in nursing homes.
Integrated Management of Pain in Advanced Dementia.
- MedicinePain management nursing : official journal of the American Society of Pain Management Nurses
- 2020
Pain and Aggression in Nursing Home Residents With Dementia: Minimum Data Set 3.0 Analysis
- Psychology, MedicineNursing research
- 2015
The relationship between pain and aggressive behavioral symptoms varies according to the communicative status of NH residents and disproportionately affects those who cannot articulate their pain.
Pain Assessment for Older Persons in Nursing Home Care: An Evidence-Based Practice Guideline.
- MedicineJournal of the American Medical Directors Association
- 2019
Staff Training to Improve Pain Care in Dementia: A Feasibility Study in Care Homes
- Medicine
- 2015
This thesis examines the problem of pain under-treatment in older adults, particularly those with dementia, and explores the role of staff training in improving pain care practices, with an empirical study examining the feasibility of a training intervention for care staff.
Effects on pain of a stepwise multidisciplinary intervention (STA OP!) that targets pain and behavior in advanced dementia: A cluster randomized controlled trial
- MedicinePalliative medicine
- 2018
STA OP! was found to decrease “observed” pain but not estimated pain, and observing pain-related behavior might help improve pain management in dementia.
Psychometric Evaluation of a Pain Intensity Measure for Persons with Dementia.
- Medicine, PsychologyPain medicine
- 2018
Initial evaluation of a seven-item pain intensity measure for persons with dementia (PIMD) that was developed using items from existing pain observational measures supports its validity and reliability.
A Comparison of the Pain Assessment Checklist for Seniors with Limited Ability to Communicate (PACSLAC) and Pain Assessment in Advanced Dementia Scale (PAINAD).
- MedicinePain management nursing : official journal of the American Society of Pain Management Nurses
- 2020
Pain assessment and management in care homes: understanding the context through a scoping review
- Medicine, PsychologyBMC Geriatrics
- 2021
Overall findings from the review indicated a lack of training and staff confidence in relation to pain assessment and management for residents with dementia, and further training and detailed guidelines for the appropriate assessment and treatment of pain are required by care home staff.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 28 REFERENCES
Pain in elderly people with severe dementia: A systematic review of behavioural pain assessment tools
- Medicine, PsychologyBMC geriatrics
- 2006
PACSLAC and DOLOPLUS2 are the most appropriate scales currently available for pain assessment in elderly people with severe dementia, based on the psychometric qualities and criteria regarding sensitivity and clinical utility.
Pain in nursing home residents: an exploration of prevalence, staff perspectives, and practical aspects of measurement.
- MedicineThe Clinical journal of pain
- 1999
This tool uncovered considerable miscommunication regarding pain between residents and staff in two nursing homes and developed a highly feasible tool for examining pain prevalence in nursing homes.
Utilizing pain assessment scales increases the frequency of diagnosing pain among elderly nursing home residents.
- MedicineJournal of pain and symptom management
- 2001
Improving the clinical usefulness of a behavioural pain scale for older people with dementia.
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of advanced nursing
- 2007
It is important to have a valid, reliable, brief and manageable pain scale available for the nursing home setting, and further research is needed to examine the adequacy and effectiveness of the scale in daily clinical practice.
Use of pain-behavioral assessment tools in the nursing home: expert consensus recommendations for practice.
- MedicineJournal of gerontological nursing
- 2010
A project to identify clinically useful pain-behavioral assessment tools that have undergone sufficient psychometric testing and recommended two tools as most representative of current state of the science, most clinically relevant, and practically applicable to integrate into everyday practice and support adherence to regulatory guidelines.
Pain Management Interventions in the Nursing Home: A Structured Review of the Literature
- MedicineJournal of the American Geriatrics Society
- 2009
Systematic approaches are needed to understand how each type of intervention improves the quality of pain management at the resident level, as the number of high‐quality studies ofPain management in NHs remains limited.
Implementing a pain management program in a long-term care facility using a quality improvement approach.
- MedicineJournal of the American Medical Directors Association
- 2009
Validating nurses' and nursing assistants' report of assessing pain in older people with dementia.
- MedicineJournal of clinical nursing
- 2010
Nurses' pain report across pain variables may be more reliable than NAs, and Institutional caregivers should be used as alternative or complementary informants for assessing pain in older people with dementia.
Measuring pain presence and intensity in nursing home residents.
- MedicineJournal of the American Medical Directors Association
- 2006
Pain assessment in older people with dementia: literature review.
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of advanced nursing
- 2009
More extensive education and training about the relationship between pain and dementia are urgently needed, as is the development and implementation of an effective pain assessment tool specifically designed to detect and measure pain in older adults with all stages of dementia.




