Article contents
How do healthcare workers judge pain in older palliative care patients with delirium near the end of life?*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 October 2015
Abstract
Pain and delirium are commonly reported in older people with advanced cancer. However, assessing pain in this population is challenging, and there is currently no validated assessment tool for this task. The present retrospective cohort study was conducted to understand how healthcare workers (HCWs; nurses and physicians) determine that older cancer patients with delirium are in pain.
We reviewed the medical records of consecutive palliative care inpatients, 65 years of age and above (N = 113), in order to identify patient-based cues used by HCWs to make pain judgments and to examine how the cues differ by delirium subtype and outcome.
We found that HCWs routinely make judgments about pain in older patients with delirium using a repertoire of strategies that includes patient self-report and observations of spontaneous and evoked behavior. Using these strategies, HCWs judged pain to be highly prevalent in this inpatient palliative care setting.
These novel findings will inform the development of valid and reliable tools to assess pain in older cancer patients with delirium.
- Type
- Original Articles
- Information
- Palliative & Supportive Care , Volume 14 , Issue 2: Measurement Development in Palliative and Supportive Care , April 2016 , pp. 151 - 158
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015
Footnotes
Presented, in part, at the 34th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Canadian Pain Society, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, in 2013.
References
REFERENCES
- 14
- Cited by