This thesis developed, validated and implemented a multimodal, point-of-care pain assessment tool for people with moderate-to-severe dementia unable to self-report. PainChek® is a novel smart device-enabled application, which uses automated facial analysis to identify pain-relevant facial markers in conjunction with clinical pain behaviours to estimate pain intensity. PainChek® was shown to have sound psychometric and clinimetric properties. Clinical implementation demonstrated a significant advance in pain assessment, allowing optimal pain management for this population
BACKGROUND Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also r...
© 2018 S. Karger AG, Basel Background/Aims: Pain is common in aged care residents with dementia; yet...
Background: Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also ...
Background: Pain in dementia is predominant particularly in the advanced stages or in those who are ...
Background: Pain in dementia is predominant particularly in the advanced stages or in those who are ...
The global increase in the prevalence of dementia has provoked a multidisciplinary response from res...
Mustafa Atee,1 Kreshnik Hoti,1,2 Richard Parsons,1 Jeffery D Hughes1 1School of Pharmacy and Biomed...
Background: Pain is common in people with dementia, yet identification is challenging. A number of p...
Objectives: Regardless of its severity, dementia does not negate the experience of pain. Rather, dem...
Purpose: The aim was to present current knowledge about pain assessment in people with dementia and ...
Recognition of pain in older persons with dementia is a considerable challenge to quality pain care ...
There are an estimated 35 million people with dementia across the world, of whom 50% experience regu...
Background: Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also ...
Aims: The aim of this thesis is to develop a staff-administered behavioural pain assessment tool for...
BACKGROUND: Recognizing pain in people with advanced dementia who cannot effectively communicate is ...
BACKGROUND Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also r...
© 2018 S. Karger AG, Basel Background/Aims: Pain is common in aged care residents with dementia; yet...
Background: Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also ...
Background: Pain in dementia is predominant particularly in the advanced stages or in those who are ...
Background: Pain in dementia is predominant particularly in the advanced stages or in those who are ...
The global increase in the prevalence of dementia has provoked a multidisciplinary response from res...
Mustafa Atee,1 Kreshnik Hoti,1,2 Richard Parsons,1 Jeffery D Hughes1 1School of Pharmacy and Biomed...
Background: Pain is common in people with dementia, yet identification is challenging. A number of p...
Objectives: Regardless of its severity, dementia does not negate the experience of pain. Rather, dem...
Purpose: The aim was to present current knowledge about pain assessment in people with dementia and ...
Recognition of pain in older persons with dementia is a considerable challenge to quality pain care ...
There are an estimated 35 million people with dementia across the world, of whom 50% experience regu...
Background: Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also ...
Aims: The aim of this thesis is to develop a staff-administered behavioural pain assessment tool for...
BACKGROUND: Recognizing pain in people with advanced dementia who cannot effectively communicate is ...
BACKGROUND Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also r...
© 2018 S. Karger AG, Basel Background/Aims: Pain is common in aged care residents with dementia; yet...
Background: Given the unreliable self-report in patients with dementia, pain assessment should also ...