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Improving Nursing Home Staff Knowledge and Attitudes About Pain

Overview
Journal Gerontologist
Specialty Geriatrics
Date 2004 Aug 28
PMID 15331804
Citations 17
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Abstract

Purpose: Effective pain management remains a serious problem in the nursing home setting. Barriers to achieving optimal pain practices include staff knowledge deficits, biases, and attitudes that influence assessment and management of the residents' pain.

Design And Methods: Twelve nursing homes participated in this intervention study: six treatment homes and six control homes, divided evenly between urban and rural locations. Three hundred licensed and unlicensed nursing home staff members completed written knowledge and attitude surveys at baseline, and 378 staff members completed the surveys after intervention implementation.

Results: Baseline results revealed notable knowledge deficits in the areas of pharmacology, drug addiction and dependence, side effect management, and nonpharmacologic management-strategy effectiveness. Significant differences were noted by job title (registered nurse/licensed practical nurse/certified nursing assistant). Case studies displayed a knowledge application problem, with nurses often filtering resident pain reports through observed resident behaviors. The intervention led to significant improvement in knowledge scores in some, but not all, the treatment homes. Perceived barriers to effective pain management showed a significant decline across all study nursing homes.

Implications: Knowledge deficits related to pain management persist in nursing homes. An interactive multifaceted educational program was only partially successful in improving knowledge across settings and job categories. Attitudes and beliefs appear more difficult to change, whereas environmental and contextual factors appeared to be reducing perceived barriers to effective pain management across all participating nursing homes.

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Kaasalainen S, Zacharias R, Hill C, Wickson-Griffiths A, Hadjistavropoulos T, Herr K Can J Pain. 2022; 1(1):171-182.

PMID: 35005352 PMC: 8730549. DOI: 10.1080/24740527.2017.1383139.


Attitudes to Drug Use in Residential Aged Care Facilities: A Cross-Sectional Survey of Nurses and Care Staff.

Lo S, Reeve E, Page A, Zaidi S, Hilmer S, Etherton-Beer C Drugs Aging. 2021; 38(8):697-711.

PMID: 34169458 DOI: 10.1007/s40266-021-00874-2.


Pain in Advanced Stages of Dementia: The Perspective of Medical Students.

Neumann-Podczaska A, Tobis S, Yermukhanova L, Wieczorowska-Tobis K Medicina (Kaunas). 2019; 55(5).

PMID: 31035451 PMC: 6572279. DOI: 10.3390/medicina55050116.


Self-management approaches among hypertensive residents in nursing homes in Malaysia.

Wei T, Omar M Malays Fam Physician. 2018; 12(3):8-17.

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Study of Individualization and Bias in Nursing Home Fall Prevention Practices.

Colon-Emeric C, Corazzini K, Mcconnell E, Pan W, Toles M, Hall R J Am Geriatr Soc. 2017; 65(4):815-821.

PMID: 28186618 PMC: 5397322. DOI: 10.1111/jgs.14675.