| Literature DB >> 34764688 |
Mohammad Rababa1, Shatha Al-Sabbah1, Audai A Hayajneh1.
Abstract
AIM: This review aims to examine nurses' perceived barriers to and facilitators of pain assessment and management in adult critical care patients.Entities:
Keywords: barriers; challenges; critical care nurses; enablers; facilitators; pain assessment; pain management
Year: 2021 PMID: 34764688 PMCID: PMC8577531 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S332423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart.
Summary of the Detailed Information of the Selected Studies
| Authors/ Country | Design | Purpose | Response Rate | Participants | Instrument | Key Findings | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang & Tsai, | Prospective cross-sectional | To discuss pain management awareness & barriers from nurses’ perspective in critical care units. | 97.9% | 370 ICU nurses from 16 hospitals | Nurses’ Knowledge & Attitudes Survey-Taiwanese version | Nurses’ perceived barriers to pain management are affected significantly by nurses’ awareness & knowledge regarding pain management in critical care units. | IV |
| Topolovec-Vranic et al, | Prospective cross-sectional | To examine the effect of a newly developed pain assessment tool for critically ill patients in a trauma/neurosurgery critical care unit. | 89% | 64 ICU patients | The Staff Satisfaction Questionnaire & Staff End-of-Study Questionnaire, The Patient Pain Management Questionnaire | Use of the Nonverbal Pain Scale improved nurses’ confidence while assessing nonverbal patients’ pain, documentation of findings, and rating of patients’ pain experience. | IV |
| Lindberg & Engström, | Qualitative | To describe critical care nurses’ experiences in assessing and managing postoperative ICU patients’ pain. | 85.7% | 6 ICU nurses | Semi-structured interviews | Establishing a good relationship between nurses and patients is essential for effective pain management. | VI |
| Rose et al, | Prospective cross-sectional | To explore nurses’ skills & knowledge related to pain assessment & management among verbal & nonverbal critically ill patients in critical care settings. | 57% | 140 RN employed in five ICUs of a 600-bed university-affiliated hospital | Survey of assessment and management of pain for critically ill adults | Nurses had a lack of confidence in their abilities and less frequent use of formal assessment tools for nonverbal patients, although they reported equal importance in assessing pain among verbal and nonverbal patients. | IV |
| Subramanian et al, | Qualitative prospective exploratory | To discuss the challenges of effective pain management among critically ill patients from nurses’ point of view. | 100% | 21 critical care nurses from a teaching health care trust | Semi-structured interviews, using the critical incident technique | The quality of care and pain management in critical care units is influenced by nurses’ decision-making regarding pain control. | VI |
| Rose et al, | Prospective cross-sectional | To explore critical care nurses’ perceptions & knowledge toward pain assessment and management in ICUs. | 24% | 842 ICU nurses | Survey of assessment and management of pain for critically ill adults | A large percentage of critical care nurses did not assess nonverbal pain using formal pain assessment tools and were unaware of published guidelines for critically ill patients’ pain management. | IV |
| Alasiry et al, | Qualitative | To discuss pain assessment & pain management in critically ill patients from nurses’ perspective. | 100% | 10 coronary care unit nurses | Semi-structured interviews | Adequate pain assessment and management needs more knowledge and improved practice among critical care nurses while dealing with pain in myocardial infarction patients. | VI |
| Machira et al, | Pre/posttest Quasi-experimental | To implement and examine the effect of an educational pain management program for critical care nurses | 87.1% | 27 nurses from 2 units in a single health institution | Nurses’ Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain (NKASRP) | Significant knowledge deficits and poor attitudes towards pain management were identified among critical care nurses. | III |
| Schreiber et al, | Pre/posttest Quasi-experimental | To examine the effect of an educational intervention on pain management in a critical care unit. | 100% | 341 medical-surgical & critical care nurses | Brockopp-Warden Pain Knowledge/Bias Questionnaire [BWPKBQ]) | A lack of knowledge among nurses regarding the basic concepts of pain control was identified. The implementation of the educational intervention led to major changes in pain management knowledge among the nurses in the selected institution. | III |
| Gerber et al, | Descriptive observational | To discuss expert nurses’ perspective of the indicators that influence their clinical reasoning towards pain assessment among nonverbal critically ill patients. | 100% | 7 expert nurses/ medical-surgical and critical care nurses | 3 methods of data collection: recorded think aloud, direct non-participant observations, and brief interviews | This study highlights the difficulty of providing care to critically ill patients, as well as the importance of comprehensive pain assessment which takes into account the patient’s complete clinical picture. | VI |
| Kizza & Muliira, | Descriptive cross-sectional | To discuss pain assessment practice facilitators and barriers among critical care nurses in a resource-limited setting. | 75% | 170 nurses | Survey of Perceived Pain Assessment and Management Practices for Patients Able and Unable to Self-Report Pain | Several barriers were found to affect adequate pain assessment among critical care nurses in a resource-limited setting. The main barriers were nurses’ workloads; lack of awareness; and poor adaptation to pain assessment tools | VI |
| Lewis et al, | Quasi-experimental | To examine the efficacy of small group discussions on barriers to and knowledge of pain management among critical care nurses. | 97% | 32 critical care nurses | Brockopp & Warden Pain Knowledge Questionnaire | Improving nurses’ pain management knowledge and decreasing their bias towards particular patients can improve critically ill patients’ clinical outcomes. | III |
| Ufashingabire et al, | Descriptive cross-sectional | To evaluate critical care nurses’ knowledge of & attitudes towards pain management among critically ill patients | 100% | 69 critical care nurses | Nurses’ Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain (NKASRP) | Several factors negatively influenced effective pain management practices in ICUs. Continuous educational training & working area improvement are needed to improve nurses’ pain management practices. | VI |
| Deldar et al, | Qualitative | To gain a better understanding of the current challenges faced by critical care nurses in using pain assessment tools with nonverbal patients. | 100% | 20 ICU nurses | Semi-structured interviews | Several factors could influence the adequate use of pain assessment scales, particularly for nonverbal patients. Identifying such factors can improve assessment & empower nurses in the use of nonverbal pain assessment tools. | VI |
| Khalil, | Descriptive exploratory | To evaluate the use of nonpharmacological management for pain control among ICU nurses | 100% | 60 ICU nurses | Nonpharmacological pain management checklist | A substantial proportion of critical care nurses did not use nonpharmacological intervention practices to control their patients’ pain. | VI |
| Hamdan, | Descriptive cross-sectional | To evaluate critical care nurses’ pain assessment practices. | 60.1% | 300 ICU nurses | The Pain Assessment and Management for the Critically Ill survey | The most valid and reliable tools for both verbal and nonverbal patients were not often used by nurses, and nurses were not aware of most behavioral pain indicators among critically ill patients. | VI |
| Asman et al, | Prospective cross-sectional | To examine how nurses’ knowledge of pain in mechanically ventilated patients & self‐perceived collaboration between nurses & physicians affect pain management | 84.67% | 187 ICU nurses | The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology EQUATOR checklist | Improved knowledge among nurses of behavioral pain indicators and self‐perceived collaboration between nurses and physicians promote adequate pain management. | IV |
| Wøien, | Prospective before/after study with a longitudinal design | To compare between the effect of regular care protocols & analog sedation on the levels of pain & sedation among critically ill patients. | 81% | 205 ICU patients | Numeric rating scale, Critical Care Pain Observational Tool | Systematic assessment & documentation succeeded in establishing effective pain management & sedation in critical care units. | IV |
| Khalil & Mashaqbeh, | Cross-sectional descriptive | To evaluate nurses’ attitudes towards & knowledge of pain | 100% | 417 ICU nurses | Nurses’ Knowledge and Attitudes Survey (NKAS) | Nurses have significant knowledge deficits and poor attitudes toward pain, specifically in certain areas (ie, pain assessment and pharmacological management). | VI |
| Roos-Blom et al, | Unadjusted and case-mix adjusted | To investigate the association between nurses’ heavy workloads & effective pain management in ICUs | 15.7% | 13 ICUs’ electronic health records (HER) | Unadjusted & case-mix adjusted mixed-effect logistic regression modeling | Lower nurse-to-patient ratios improve pain management, especially in critically ill patients. |
Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; LOE, level of evidence.
The Summary of the Measures Used in the Selected Quantitative Studies
| Name of Tool | Number of Studies They Appear in | Purpose | Psychometric Properties |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nurses’ Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain (NKASRP) | 4 | To evaluate nurses’ knowledge of & attitudes towards pain assessment & pain management. | Cronbach’s alpha of 0.73, Test-retest reliability of > 0.80, Content and construct validity were established by pain experts |
| The Pain Assessment and Management for the Critically Ill survey | 3 | To assess nurses’ pain assessment practices among verbal & nonverbal patients. | Content validity, test-retest reliability, and comprehensiveness were tested by ten experts in pain. |
| The Pain Assessment and Management for the Critically Ill survey(modified) | 1 | To assess nurses’ pain assessment practices among verbal & nonverbal patients. | Cronbach’s alpha of the modified tool 0.71, content validity of 0.90 |
| Brockopp-Warden Pain Knowledge/Bias Questionnaire [BWPKBQ]) | 2 | To evaluate nurses’ knowledge of pain relief & biases towards certain patient groups. | Test and retest correlation coefficient 0.86 |
| Numeric rating scale, Critical Care Pain Observational Tool | 1 | To assess pain levels among verbal & nonverbal patients, respectively | The authors only mentioned that all instruments used had been validated |
| The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology EQUATOR checklist | 1 | To evaluate nurses’ knowledge of pain indicators, nurse-physician collaboration & satisfaction, & adequacy of pain management. | Cronbach’s alpha of three sections 0.82, 0.94, 0.84 respectively |
| Nonpharmacological pain management checklist | 1 | To explore critical care nurses’ implementation of nonpharmacological pain interventions to control their patients’ pain. | Test and retest correlation coefficient of 0.7 |
| The Staff Satisfaction Questionnaire and Staff End-of-Study Questionnaire | 1 | To investigate pain assessment & management from nurses’ perspective & their confidence level in assessing & managing pain in both verbal & nonverbal patients. | The authors did not evaluate the psychometric properties of the tools |
| The Patient Pain Management Questionnaire | 1 | To assess patients’ pain management from their point of view & their level of satisfaction during their experience in intensive care units | The authors did not evaluate the psychometric properties of the tool |
The Summary of the Measures Used in the Selected Qualitative Studies
| Authors | Method | Purpose | Type of Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deldar et al | Semi-structured interviews | To investigate a better understanding of the current challenges faced by critical care nurses in using pain assessment tools among nonverbal patients | Inductive approach based on the Graneheim and Lundman method. |
| Alasiry et al | Semi-structured, 20-minute interviews | To gain a better understanding of pain assessment and pain management in critically ill patients in cardiac care units from nurses’ perspectives. | Content analysis using manual analyzing based on the Graneheim and Lundman method. |
| Subramanian et al | Semi-structured interviews with nurses using the critical incident technique. Interviews lasted between 45 minutes-1.5 hours | To understand challenges related to effective pain management among critically ill patients from nurses’ perspective. | Content analysis using the framework analysis developed by the National Centre for Social Research. |
| Lindberg & Engström | Semi-structured interviews lasting between 20–70 minutes | To gain a better understanding of critical care nurses’ experiences in assessing and managing postoperative patients’ pain in an intensive care unit | Content analysis described by Downe-Wamboldt. |
The Barriers to and Facilitators of Pain Assessment and Management
| Barriers | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nurse-Related Barriers | Patient-Related Barriers | Physician-Related Barriers | System-Related Barriers |
| ● Nurses’ lack of knowledge regarding the use of pain assessment tools | ● Patients’ inability to communicate | ● Physicians’ prescription of analgesics being independent of evaluation pain scores | ● Absence of standardized guidelines and protocols for pain evaluation and control |
| ● Ongoing education and professional training related to pain assessment and management | ● Self-reporting of pain | ● Collaboration between physicians and nurses | ● Reporting and discussing patients’ pain scores during nurse-to-nurse handovers |