scholarly journals Self-report pain assessment tools for cognitively intact older adults: Integrative review

2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. e12170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youjeong Kang ◽  
George Demiris
2012 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude K. Provost

This article describes the steps of a pilot dissemination study toward adopting a pain assessment tool for older homebound adults with dementia. The chosen practice site had not previously used adequate pain assessment tools for older adults with dementia. After the selection process by a pain assessment tool committee, providers (N = 20) were asked to choose between three tools: pain assessment in advanced dementia (PAINAD), the Abbey Pain Scale, and DOLOPLUS-2/ DOLOSHORT. Providers voted to use the PAINAD (54%) for the following 2 weeks. A preintervention audit showed that without the use of a pain assessment tool, 97.7% of the charts did not have any documentation of a pain diagnosis nor an intervention. Postintervention using PAINAD, 91.3% of the charts had both (χ2[1] = 18.645, p < .001). The feedback obtained from providers (n = 10) after 2 weeks of testing the tool was unanimously positive. Many providers reported increased confidence in identifying pain and some changed their practice by placing pain assessment in the forefront of their encounter with their older clients with dementia. PAINAD was adopted as the pain assessment tool for this practice.


JMIR Aging ◽  
10.2196/25928 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. e25928
Author(s):  
Haley M LaMonica ◽  
Anna E Roberts ◽  
Tracey A Davenport ◽  
Ian B Hickie

Background As the global population ages, there is increased interest in developing strategies to promote health and well-being in later life, thus enabling continued productivity, social engagement, and independence. As older adults use technologies with greater frequency, proficiency, and confidence, health information technologies (HITs) now hold considerable potential as a means to enable broader access to tools and services for the purposes of screening, treatment, monitoring, and ongoing maintenance of health for this group. The InnoWell Platform is a digital tool co-designed with lived experience to facilitate better outcomes by enabling access to a comprehensive multidimensional assessment, the results of which are provided in real time to enable consumers to make informed decisions about clinical and nonclinical care options independently or in collaboration with a health professional. Objective This study aims to evaluate the usability and acceptability of a prototype of the InnoWell Platform, co-designed and configured with and for older adults, using self-report surveys. Methods Participants were adults 50 years and older who were invited to engage with the InnoWell Platform naturalistically (ie, at their own discretion) for a period of 90 days. In addition, they completed short web-based surveys at baseline regarding their background, health, and mental well-being. After 90 days, participants were asked to complete the System Usability Scale to evaluate the usability and acceptability of the prototyped InnoWell Platform, with the aim of informing the iterative redesign and development of this digital tool before implementation within a health service setting. Results A total of 19 participants consented to participate in the study; however, only the data from the 16 participants (mean age 62.8 years, SD 7.5; range 50-72) who completed at least part of the survey at 90 days were included in the analyses. Participants generally reported low levels of psychological distress and good mental well-being. In relation to the InnoWell Platform, the usability scores were suboptimal. Although the InnoWell Platform was noted to be easy to use, participants had difficulty identifying the relevance of the tool for their personal circumstances. Ease of use, the comprehensive nature of the assessment tools, and the ability to track progress over time were favored features of the InnoWell Platform, whereas the need for greater personalization and improved mobile functionality were cited as areas for improvement. Conclusions HITs such as the InnoWell Platform have tremendous potential to improve access to cost-effective and low-intensity interventions at scale to improve and maintain mental health and well-being in later life. However, to promote adoption of and continued engagement with such tools, it is essential that these HITs are personalized and relevant for older adult end users, accounting for differences in background, clinical profiles, and levels of need.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. e000304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mairi Mascarenhas ◽  
Michelle Beattie ◽  
Michelle Roxburgh ◽  
John MacKintosh ◽  
Noreen Clarke ◽  
...  

Managing pain is challenging in the intensive care unit (ICU) as often patients are unable to self-report due to the effects of sedation required for mechanical ventilation. Minimal sedative use and the utilisation of analgesia-first approaches are advocated as best practice to reduce unwanted effects of oversedation and poorly managed pain. Despite evidence-based recommendations, behavioural pain assessment tools are not readily implemented in many critical care units. A local telephone audit conducted in April 2017 found that only 30% of Scottish ICUs are using these validated pain instruments. The intensive care unit (ICU) at Raigmore Hospital, NHS Highland, initiated a quality improvement (QI) project using the Model for Improvement (MFI) to implement an analgesia-first approach utilising a validated and reliable behavioural pain assessment tool, namely the Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool (CPOT). Over a six-month period, the project deployed QI tools and techniques to test and implement the CPOT. The process measures related to (i) the nursing staff’s reliability to assess and document pain scores at least every four hours and (ii) to treat behavioural signs of pain or CPOT scores ≥ 3 with a rescue bolus of opioid analgesia. The findings from this project confirm that the observed trends in both process measures had reduced over time. Four hourly assessments of pain had increased to 89% and the treatment of CPOT scores ≥3 had increased to 100%.


2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 298-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane Chung ◽  
George Demiris ◽  
Hilaire J. Thompson

Mobility is critical in maintaining independence in older adults. This study aims to systematically review the scientific literature to identify measures of mobility limitation for community-dwelling older adults. A systematic search of PubMed, CINAHL, and psycINFO, using the search terms “mobility limitation”, “mobility disability”, and “mobility difficulty” yielded 1,847 articles from 1990 to 2012; a final selection of 103 articles was used for the present manuscript. Tools to measure mobility were found to be either self-report or performance-based instruments. Commonly measured constructs of mobility included walking, climbing stairs, and lower extremity function. There was heterogeneity in ways of defining and measuring mobility limitation in older adults living in the community. Given the lack of consistency in assessment tools for mobility, a clear understanding and standardization of instruments are required for comparison across studies and for better understanding indicators and outcomes of mobility limitation in community-dwelling older adults.


Author(s):  
INDAH SRI WAHYUNINGSIH

Critically ill adult patients with a ventilator in intensive care often receive treatment that causes pain. Pain is a symptom that often occurs in critically ill adult patients with ventilator and it is very individual. Pain assessment in critically ill patients with the ventilator is needed because of the patient unable to self-report of pain. Pain assessments critically ill adult patients have been developed. However, there is no valid and reliable instrument to assess pain. The objectives of the literature review are to identify the instruments of pain assessment in patients with ventilator. The method of literature was performed through seeking publication of articles in MEDLINE, Google Search, PubMed, and Proquest with keywords pain assessment, tool, critical care, adult, critically ill, unconscious and ventilator. Literatures were undertaken from 2000-2015 with a cross-sectional study design, before and after studies and observational study. The results of the study according to the characteristics of the research was found five pain assessment instruments, they were NVPS, P.A.I.N, Comfort scale, BPS and CPOT. The validity and reliability CPOT is highest among others. All instruments had been measured its validity and reliability, but it had never tested its sensitivity and specificity. So, more researches should be conducted related to the sensitivity and specificity of all the instruments of pain in critically ill adult patients with a ventilator.�Keywords : Pain assessment, critically ill, adult, ventilator.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 596-597
Author(s):  
Raza Haque ◽  
Mara Bezerko ◽  
Lauren Tibbits ◽  
Karen Tate

Abstract Pain is one of the most common reasons for Emergency Department (ED) visits among older adults. However, timely pain assessment and management in this population in ED is a challenging task due to many factors ranging from; sensory, cognitive impairments, chronic pain, reliability of assessment tools, multimorbidity and system factors such as triage-based dynamic ED workflow. Where the implementation of the EMR was anticipated to improve patientcare, literature has indicated the barriers in effective utilization of the EMR for this purpose. We posit that pain assessment and documentation could be variable among older adults presenting with non-surgical conditions. Objectives:1. To examine the proportion of documented initial pain assessment of nonsurgical older adults visiting emergency department 2. To examine the number of initial pain assessments documented in the chart by the five major categories of ICD-10 diagnoses upon discharge. Methods A retrospective exploratory chart review of 4613 emergency room visits for first pain assessment in the EMR conducted for all adults 65 years or older, presenting with non-surgical conditions, who were discharged same day at an urban teaching hospital. Results In our study 75.72% of encounters reviewed had a documented pain assessment. Completed pain assessments for the corresponding five most common non-surgical diagnostic categories presenting to our ED: Abdominal pain (92.59%), MSK (92.11 %), chest pain (83.92%), dyspnea ( 80%) and falls (79.46%). Conclusion Frequency of pain assessment and the management process of older adults presenting with non-surgical conditions in the institution studied was variable and differed based on presenting conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 49-54
Author(s):  
Melissa Kachaturoff ◽  
Kim Shidler ◽  
Adrienne Fasbinder ◽  
Meriam Caboral-Stevens

2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 719-732 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikki L. Hill ◽  
Jacqueline Mogle ◽  
Sakshi Bhargava ◽  
Tyler Reed Bell ◽  
Iris Bhang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTObjectives:The current study examined whether self-reported memory problems among cognitively intact older adults changed concurrently with, preceded, or followed depressive symptoms over time.Design:Data were collected annually via in-person comprehensive medical and neuropsychological examinations as part of the Einstein Aging Study.Setting:Community-dwelling older adults in an urban, multi-ethnic area of New York City were interviewed.Participants:The current study included a total of 1,162 older adults (Mage = 77.65, SD = 5.03, 63.39% female; 74.12% White). Data were utilized from up to 11 annual waves per participant.Measurements:Multilevel modeling tested concurrent and lagged associations between three types of memory self-report (frequency of memory problems, perceived one-year decline, and perceived ten-year decline) and depressive symptoms.Results:Results showed that self-reported frequency of memory problems covaried with depressive symptoms only in participants who were older at baseline. Changes in perceived one-year and ten-year memory decline were related to changes in depressive symptoms across all ages. Depressive symptoms increased the likelihood of perceived ten-year memory decline the next year; however, perceived ten-year memory decline did not predict future depressive symptoms. Additionally, no significant temporal relationship was observed between depressive symptoms and self-reported frequency of memory problems or perceived one-year memory decline.Conclusion:Our findings highlight the importance of testing the unique associations of different types of self-reported memory problems with depressive symptoms.


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