| Literature DB >> 28970442 |
Joshua Jones1, Tin Fei Sim2, Jeff Hughes3.
Abstract
Elderly people are susceptible to both falls and cognitive impairment making them a particularly vulnerable group of patients when it comes to pain assessment and management in the emergency department (ED). Pain assessment is often difficult in patients who present to the ED with a cognitive impairment as they are frequently unable to self-report their level of pain, which can have a negative impact on pain management. This paper aims to review how cognitive impairment influences pain assessment in elderly adults who present to the ED with an injury due to a fall. A literature search of EMBASE, ProQuest, PubMed, Science Direct, SciFinder and the Curtin University Library database was conducted using keyword searches to generate lists of articles which were then screened for relevance by title and then abstract to give a final list of articles for full-text review. Further articles were identified by snowballing from the reference lists of the full-text articles. The literature reports that ED staff commonly use visual or verbal analogue scales to assess pain, but resort to their own intuition or physiological parameters rather than using standardised observational pain assessment tools when self-report of pain is not attainable due to cognitive impairment. While studies have found that the use of pain assessment tools improves the recognition and management of pain, pain scores are often not recorded for elderly patients with a cognitive impairment in the ED, leading to poorer pain management in this patient group in terms of time to analgesic administration and the use of strong opioids. All healthcare professionals involved in the care of such patients, including pharmacists, need to be aware of this and strive to ensure analgesic use is guided by appropriate and accurate pain assessment in the ED.Entities:
Keywords: analgesic; cognitive impairment; elderly; emergency department; falls; pain assessment; quality use of medicines
Year: 2017 PMID: 28970442 PMCID: PMC5597155 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy5020030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Figure 1Literature search. Keyword searches of the databases were used to identify articles for potential inclusion in the review. Additional articles were identified through snowballing.
Summary of selected studies that investigate pain assessment practices in the ED.
| Authors | Design | Size | Setting | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focus group interviews, qualitative | 80 emergency nurses, 16 focus groups | Four Australian EDs | Nurses reported that visual or verbal analogue scales for pain assessment are often unsuitable in cognitively impaired patients. When these methods failed, nurses relied on clinical judgement and physiological measures (e.g., respiratory rate) rather than standardised observational pain assessment tools. | |
| Retrospective cross-sectional study of patient ED records | 255 elderly patients with long bone fractures | Four Australian EDs | Only 68% of patients had a pain score during their ED admission. The verbal analogue scale was routinely used. There was no evidence that ED staff used tools designed specifically for cognitively impaired people. | |
| Retrospective cross-sectional study of patient ED records | 646 patients with fractured neck of femur | 36 EDs across 5 Australian states | Confusion/dementia was reported as a barrier to analgesia in 42 out of the 99 patients who had a barrier recorded. | |
| Retrospective cross-sectional study of patient ED records | 224 patients with fractured neck of femur | Wythenshawe Hospital ED, Manchester, United Kingdom. | A pain score was documented for 45% of cognitively impaired patients compared with 75% of cognitively intact patients. |