The last three days of life: a comparison of pain management in the young old and the oldest old hospitalised patients using the Resident Assessment Instrument for Palliative Care

TitleThe last three days of life: a comparison of pain management in the young old and the oldest old hospitalised patients using the Resident Assessment Instrument for Palliative Care
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsSteindal S.A, Bredal I.S, Ranhoff A.H, Sorbye L.W, Lerdal A.
JournalInternational journal of older people nursing
Volume10
Issue4
Pagination263-272
ISBN Number1748-3743 (electronic)<br/>1748-3743
Accession Number615306422
Keywords*Geriatric Nursing, *procedures, Aged, analgesia, analgesic agent/ad [Drug Administration], Comparative Study, cross-sectional study, Documentation, Female, Geriatric Assessment, Human, Male, Norway, Nursing Assessment, Pain Measurement, palliative therapy, retrospective study, Terminal Care, very elderly
Abstract

DESIGN: A retrospective cross-sectional comparative study., METHODS: The study included 190 patients from a Norwegian general hospital: 101 young old patients (aged 65-84 years) and 89 oldest old patients (aged 85-100 years). Data were extracted from electronic patient records (EPRs) using the Resident Assessment Instrument for Palliative Care., AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To compare the pain characteristics documented by healthcare workers for the young old and the oldest old hospitalised patients and the types of analgesics administered in the last three days of life., BACKGROUND: Pain is a common symptom in older patients at the end of life. Little research has evaluated pain management among the oldest hospitalised dying patients., RESULTS: No significant differences were found between the young old and the oldest old patients with regard to pain characteristics. Pain intensity was poorly recorded in the EPRs. Most of the patients received adequate pain control. Morphine was the most frequently administered analgesic for dying patients. Compared to the oldest old patients, a greater proportion of the young old patients received paracetamol combined with codeine (OR = 3.25, 95% CI 1.02-10.40)., CONCLUSIONS: There appeared to be no differences in healthcare workers' documentation of pain characteristics in young old and oldest old patients, but young old patients were more likely to receive paracetamol in combination with codeine., IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: A limitation of the study is the retrospective design and that data were collected from a single hospital. Therefore, caution should be taken for interpretation of the results. The use of systematic patient-reported assessments in combination with feasible validated tools could contribute to more comprehensive documentation of pain intensity and improved pain control.Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

DOI10.1111/opn.12076