• Pain Manag Nurs · Oct 2019

    An Exploration of Pain Documentation for People Living with Dementia in Aged Care Services.

    • Sharon M Andrews, Joanna F Dipnall, Rumbidzai Tichawangana, Kathryn J Hayes, Janna Anneke Fitzgerald, Philip Siddall, Christopher Poulos, and Colm Cunningham.
    • School of Health Sciences, College of Health and Medicine, University of Tasmania, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia.
    • Pain Manag Nurs. 2019 Oct 1; 20 (5): 475-481.

    BackgroundPain in people with dementia is a common occurrence. Providing evidence-based pain management for people with dementia in residential aged care services is imperative to providing quality care. However, it remains unclear from current research how various aged care staff (Registered Nurses (RNs), Enrolled Nurses (ENs), Personal Care Assistants (PCAs)) engage at specific points of the pain management pathway. With structural changes to the residential aged care workforce over the past two decades, understanding the relative contributions of these aged care staff to pain management practices is crucial for future practice development.AimTo investigate the quality and completeness of pain documentation for people living with dementia, and assess the extent to aged care staff are engaged in documentation processes.DesignA three-month retrospective documentation audit.Setting And ParticipantsThe audit was conducted on the files of 114 residents with moderate to very severe dementia, across four Australian residential aged care facilities.MethodsData was collected on each resident's pain profile (n=114). One hundred and sixty-nine (169) pain episodes were audited for quality and completeness of pain documentation and the extent to which aged care staff (RNs/ENs and PCAs) were engaged in the documentation of pain management.ResultsTwenty-nine percent of pain episodes had no documentation about how resident pain was identified and only 22% of the episodes contained an evidence-based (E-B) assessment. At least one intervention was documented for 89% of the pain episodes, the majority (68%) being non-pharmacological. Only 8% of pain episodes had an E-B evaluation reported. Thirteen percent (13%) of episodes contained information across all four pain management domains (Identification/ problems, assessment, intervention and evaluation). Documentation by PCAs was evident at all points in the pain management pathway. PCAs were responsible for considerately more episodes of assessment (50% vs 18%) compared to nursing staff.Conclusion And Clinical ImplicationsDespite the high prevalence of pain in people with dementia in aged care settings, current pain management documentation does not reflect best practice standards. Future capacity building initiatives must engage PCAs, as key stakeholders in pain management, with support and clinical leadership of nursing staff.Copyright © 2019 American Society for Pain Management Nursing. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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