• Pain Manag Nurs · Apr 2021

    Effect of a QI Intervention on Nursing Assistants' Pain Knowledge and Reporting Behavior.

    • Jessica A Joy, Lorraine M Novosel, Dianxu Ren, and Sandra Engberg.
    • University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
    • Pain Manag Nurs. 2021 Apr 1; 22 (2): 150-157.

    BackgroundPain among long-term care residents is often underdiagnosed and inadequately treated. We examined the effect of a multimodal intervention on certified nursing assistants' pain recognition knowledge and verbal reporting behavior. Secondarily, we examined pain documentation in a newly established pain log compared with pain verbally reported to nurses and documented in the electronic health record (EHR).DesignQuality improvement project using a pretest-posttest design.SettingA skilled nursing and rehabilitation facility in Southwestern Pennsylvania including two long-term care units and one transitional rehabilitation unit.Participants/SubjectsFifty-six nursing assistants.MethodsThe intervention was a face-to-face educational session with a training video and introduction of a new pain log used to document residents' pain. Pain knowledge was measured before and after the educational intervention. Multiple measures were used to examine nursing assistants' pain reporting.ResultsNursing assistants' pain knowledge improved (p < .001). There was no change in verbal pain reporting behaviors. The percent of pain episodes documented in the electronic health record that were reported to nurses varied by unit type (45% on the long-term care units vs. 100% on the rehabilitation unit) but remained unchanged postintervention. Pain logs were used more often on the rehabilitation than the long-term care units; use was low overall. Nursing assistant reports that nurses provided feedback on their reports of resident pain increased from 45% in week 1 to 75% in week 4.ConclusionsAlthough the multimodal intervention improved nursing assistants' pain knowledge and their perceptions of the feedback they received from nurses when they reported pain, it had no effect on certified nursing assistants reporting of pain to nurses (per nurse report).Copyright © 2020 American Society for Pain Management Nursing. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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