1. PAIN ASSESSMENT IN PEOPLE WITH SEVERE COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENTS—DO NURSES USE OBSERVATIONAL INSTRUMENTS?
- Author
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Bernhard Holle, Sabine Bartholomeyczik, Rebecca Palm, and Erika Sirsch
- Subjects
Abstracts ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Severe cognitive impairments ,Health (social science) ,business.industry ,Pain assessment ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Observational study ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychiatry ,business ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Many nursing home residents with cognitive impairments (CI) suffer from chronic pain, which is also discussed as a reason for challenging behavior. Because of their impaired communication abilities it is recommended to use an observational pain-instrument for the assessment. It is not known, if in German nursing homes the pain assessment for residents with severe CI is performed with the help of observational instruments or if also self-rating instruments are used. We assumed that in Dementia Care Units (DCU) observational pain instruments should be used more often than in Traditional Care Units (TCU). To find this out, we analyzed cross-sectional data from n=1397 residents living in n=75 care units (n=30 DCUs and n=45 TCUs). Descriptive statistics showed that in DCUs 82% of their residents with severe CI were assessed with an observational instrument; in TCUs this applied to only 42%. The differences were statistically significant (p
- Published
- 2017
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