Nurses' response to pain communication from patients: A post-test experimental study

被引:16
|
作者
McDonald, Deborah Dillon
LaPorta, Matthew
Meadows-Oliver, Mikki
机构
[1] Univ Connecticut, Sch Nursing, Storrs, CT 06269 USA
[2] Albert Einstein Med Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19141 USA
[3] Yale Univ, Sch Nursing, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2005.11.017
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Background: Inadequate-communication about pain can result in increased pain for patients. Objectives: The purpose of the current pilot study was to test how nurses respond when patients use their own words, a pain intensity scale, or both to communicate pain. Design: A post-test only experimental design was used with three pain description conditions, personal and numeric; personal only; numeric only. Setting: The setting included six hospitals and one school of nursing located in the northeastern United States. Participants: Participants included 122 registered medical surgical nurses. Methods: Nurses were randomly assigned to condition, and read a vignette about a trauma patient with moderately severe pain. The vignettes were identical except for the patient's pain description and age. The nurses then wrote how they would respond to the patient's pain. Two blind raters content analyzed the responses, giving nurses one point for including each of six a priori criteria derived from the Acute Pain Management Panel [1992. Acute Pain Management: operative or medical procedures and trauma. Clinical practice guideline (AHCPR Publication No. 92-0032)., Rockville, MD, USA] and the American Pain Society [2003. Principles of analgesic use in the treatment of acute pain and cancer pain, Glenville, IL, USA]. Results: Nurses planned similar numbers of pain management strategies across the three conditions, with a mean of 2.1 (SD = 1.14) strategies out of the recommended six. Conclusions: Nurses did not respond with more pain management strategies when patients describe pain in their own words, or in their own words and a pain intensity scale. The relatively small number of pain management strategies planned by the nurses suggests that nurses use few strategies to respond to moderately severe pain problems. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:29 / 35
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effect of an intervention on the congruence of nurses' and patients' perceptions of patient-centred care: A pre-test post-test study
    Castro, Eva M.
    Van Regenmortel, Tine
    Vanhaecht, Kris
    Sermeus, Walter
    Kiekens, Carlotte
    Claes, Kathleen
    Bruyneel, Luk
    JOURNAL OF EVALUATION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2020, 26 (06) : 1648 - 1656
  • [2] Experience from the post-test analysis of MEGAPIE
    Zanini, L.
    Dementjev, S.
    Groeschel, F.
    Leung, W.
    Milenkovic, R.
    Thomsen, K.
    Wagner, W.
    Wohlmuther, M.
    Cheng, Xu
    Class, A.
    Konobeyev, A.
    Agostini, P.
    Meloni, P.
    David, J. -C.
    Letourneau, A.
    Leray, S.
    Panebianco, S.
    Cachon, L.
    Latge, C.
    Roubin, P.
    Guertin, A.
    Thiolliere, N.
    Dierckx, M.
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS, 2011, 415 (03) : 367 - 377
  • [3] A PRE-TEST AND POST-TEST STUDY IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE
    Mason, J. M.
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, 1948, 42 (03): : 228 - 233
  • [4] QUASI-EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN FOR ASSESSMENT OF POST-TEST SENSITIZATION
    HUCK, SW
    CHUANG, ICS
    EDUCATIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT, 1977, 37 (02) : 409 - 416
  • [5] Effects of a respiratory physiotherapy session in patients with LRTI: a pre/post-test study
    Oliveira, Ana
    Pinho, Catia
    Marques, Alda
    CLINICAL RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2017, 11 (06): : 703 - 712
  • [6] The inclusion of ‘then-test’ questions in post-test questionnaires alters post-test responses: a randomized study of bias in health program evaluation
    Sandra Nolte
    Gerald R. Elsworth
    Andrew J. Sinclair
    Richard H. Osborne
    Quality of Life Research, 2012, 21 : 487 - 494
  • [7] The inclusion of 'then-test' questions in post-test questionnaires alters post-test responses: a randomized study of bias in health program evaluation
    Nolte, Sandra
    Elsworth, Gerald R.
    Sinclair, Andrew J.
    Osborne, Richard H.
    QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 2012, 21 (03) : 487 - 494
  • [8] Performance and post-test characterization of an OTM system in an experimental coal gasifier
    Gupta, Sapna
    Adams, Joseph J.
    Wilson, Jamie R.
    Eddings, Eric G.
    Mahapatra, Manoj K.
    Singh, Prabhakar
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2016, 165 : 72 - 80
  • [9] Response Shift Bias in Pre- and Post-test Studies Reply
    Kumar, Gurumoorthy Rajesh
    Madhavi, Sankar
    Karthikeyan, Kaliaperumal
    Thirunavakarasu, M. R.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, 2016, 61 (01) : 91 - 92
  • [10] Impact of observer variation on post-test probability, results from a simulation study.
    Sadatsafavi, M.
    Moayyeri, A.
    Ganjizadeh, S.
    Shalmani, H. T.
    Najafzadeh, M.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2006, 163 (11) : S23 - S23