Objective: To examine the extent of agreement between nursing home residents' (or their proxies') reports of pain presence and intensity as derived from an interview questionnaire and the Minimum Data Set (MDS) nearest to the interview date. Design: Cross-sectional comparison of the 2 data sources on pain measurements. Setting: Nursing homes included in evaluation projects of EverCare program and Minnesota Senior Health Options. Participants: Nursing home residents (n = 3100) were grouped based on the type of respondent answering the interview questionnaire: Resident, family proxy, or staff proxy. Measurements: We used kappa statistics and multinomial logit regression to examine agreement between the interview questionnaire and the MDS on p...
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain affects nursing home residents' daily life. Pain assessment is central to a...
Context: Despite many nursing home residents experiencing pain, research about the multidimensional ...
BACKGROUND: Clinicians may place more weight on vocal complaints of pain than the other pain behavio...
Objective: To measure the prevalence of pain among residents of rural and regional nursing homes in ...
Abstract—Older adults in nursing homes experience pain that is often underassessed and undertreated....
Background: Pain is common and often more complex to assess among nursing homes residents with cogni...
OBJECTIVE: Pain is common among nursing home residents with cognitive impairment and dementia. Pain ...
Objective. To examine the usefulness of the PainCQ-33 survey as a measure of interdisciplinary pain ...
The purpose of this research was to describe the kinds of pain assessments nursing home staff use wi...
Background. We examined whether questions addressing the effect of pain on day-to-day function add u...
Purpose: We developed and evaluated an explicit procedure for obtaining self-report pain data from n...
Purpose: To provide contemporary estimates of pain by level of cognitive impairment among US nursing...
Aims and objectives. To evaluate the usefulness of registered nurses' (RNs) and nursing assistants' ...
Prior studies estimate that \u3e40% of long-stay nursing home (NH) residents experience persistent p...
The purpose of this study was (1) To develop strategies that can be used to identify pain in elderly...
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain affects nursing home residents' daily life. Pain assessment is central to a...
Context: Despite many nursing home residents experiencing pain, research about the multidimensional ...
BACKGROUND: Clinicians may place more weight on vocal complaints of pain than the other pain behavio...
Objective: To measure the prevalence of pain among residents of rural and regional nursing homes in ...
Abstract—Older adults in nursing homes experience pain that is often underassessed and undertreated....
Background: Pain is common and often more complex to assess among nursing homes residents with cogni...
OBJECTIVE: Pain is common among nursing home residents with cognitive impairment and dementia. Pain ...
Objective. To examine the usefulness of the PainCQ-33 survey as a measure of interdisciplinary pain ...
The purpose of this research was to describe the kinds of pain assessments nursing home staff use wi...
Background. We examined whether questions addressing the effect of pain on day-to-day function add u...
Purpose: We developed and evaluated an explicit procedure for obtaining self-report pain data from n...
Purpose: To provide contemporary estimates of pain by level of cognitive impairment among US nursing...
Aims and objectives. To evaluate the usefulness of registered nurses' (RNs) and nursing assistants' ...
Prior studies estimate that \u3e40% of long-stay nursing home (NH) residents experience persistent p...
The purpose of this study was (1) To develop strategies that can be used to identify pain in elderly...
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain affects nursing home residents' daily life. Pain assessment is central to a...
Context: Despite many nursing home residents experiencing pain, research about the multidimensional ...
BACKGROUND: Clinicians may place more weight on vocal complaints of pain than the other pain behavio...