The ageing revolution is changing the composition of our society with more people becoming very old with higher risks for developing both pain and dementia. Pain is normally signaled by verbal communication, which becomes more and more deteriorated in people with dementia. Thus, these individuals unnecessarily suffer from manageable but unrecognized pain. Pain assessment in patients with dementia is a challenging endeavor, with scientific advancements quickly developing. Pain assessment tools and protocols (mainly observational scales) have been incorporated into national and international guidelines of pain assessment in aged individuals. To effectively assess pain, interdisciplinary collaboration (nurses, physicians, psychologists, comput...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The global increase in the prevalence of dementia has provoked a multidisciplinary response from res...
WHY: There is no evidence that persons with dementia physiologically experience less pain than do o...
There are an estimated 35 million people with dementia across the world, of whom 50% experience regu...
OBJECTIVES: To describe the current literature on pain assessment and pain treatment for community...
Pain is highly prevalent in the aging population. Individuals with neurological disorders such as de...
Background Painful conditions are common in older adults, including people with dementia. The sympto...
Pain is common in people with dementia, and pain can exacerbate the behavioural and psychological sy...
Background and Objective: Pain in patients with Alzheimer’s disease is a complex issue; these patien...
Pain represents a major treatment challenge in older people with dementia. The majority of healthy o...
BACKGROUND: Pain management for people with dementia is challenging. There is limited understanding ...
Background: Hospitalised older patients are complex. Comorbidity and polypharmacy complicate frailty...
Dementia is a progressive disease associated with irreversible impairment and loss of cognitive abil...
Purpose: The aim was to present current knowledge about pain assessment in people with dementia and ...
Context: Pain is linked to behaviors and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD); however, it ofte...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The global increase in the prevalence of dementia has provoked a multidisciplinary response from res...
WHY: There is no evidence that persons with dementia physiologically experience less pain than do o...
There are an estimated 35 million people with dementia across the world, of whom 50% experience regu...
OBJECTIVES: To describe the current literature on pain assessment and pain treatment for community...
Pain is highly prevalent in the aging population. Individuals with neurological disorders such as de...
Background Painful conditions are common in older adults, including people with dementia. The sympto...
Pain is common in people with dementia, and pain can exacerbate the behavioural and psychological sy...
Background and Objective: Pain in patients with Alzheimer’s disease is a complex issue; these patien...
Pain represents a major treatment challenge in older people with dementia. The majority of healthy o...
BACKGROUND: Pain management for people with dementia is challenging. There is limited understanding ...
Background: Hospitalised older patients are complex. Comorbidity and polypharmacy complicate frailty...
Dementia is a progressive disease associated with irreversible impairment and loss of cognitive abil...
Purpose: The aim was to present current knowledge about pain assessment in people with dementia and ...
Context: Pain is linked to behaviors and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD); however, it ofte...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The global increase in the prevalence of dementia has provoked a multidisciplinary response from res...
WHY: There is no evidence that persons with dementia physiologically experience less pain than do o...