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New study highlights pain experienced by care home residents

Senior woman sitting on the wheelchair alone

New understanding of how pain affects nursing home residents may alter care and improve quality of life in this population, say those behind a new study. 

Despite awareness that pain is common in nursing home residents, there has been minimal attention focused on how this pain changes over time. 

A new study from Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University School of Nursing researchers presents compelling evidence of the existence of four distinct pain trajectories in this population.

This new understanding of pain over time can help nursing home staff and clinicians better understand, recognise and respond to risk factors associated with persistent pain in individuals living in nursing homes. 

Ultimately, consideration of pain trajectories may alter courses of care and illness, prevent adverse outcomes and improve quality of life.

Connie Cole, PhD, DNP, APRN, corresponding and lead author of the study, said: “Identification of pain trajectories can help us improve pain control for nursing home residents.

“We can identify risk factors, such as obesity or fracture, and use those to recognise individuals who are at increased risk for pain. For patients who are not able to self-report, such as someone with Alzheimer’s disease, we can use those factors to identify that they might be at increased risk for pain and therefore monitor them more closely.”

Persistent pain is associated with increased likelihood of depression, sleep problems, decreased happiness and diminished life satisfaction resulting in reduced quality of life and poorer health outcomes.

Senior author, Susan Hickman, PhD, director of Indiana University Center for Aging Research at Regenstrief Institute and interim president and CEO of the Institute, explained: “This work highlights that pain is under-treated among many populations, including older adults in nursing homes. It’s critical that we continue to shine a spotlight on the unmet needs of these vulnerable individuals.”

A total of 46,103 pain assessments of 4,864 nursing home residents, nearly two-thirds of whom were female, from 44 facilities were analysed in the study.

The researchers identified four distinct long-term pain trajectories.

Among the study’s numerous findings regarding risk factors associated with various pain trajectories:

Dr Cole, who has worked as a nurse practitioner, said: “As a clinician, my experience has been that nursing home residents with a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease or dementia are less likely to be in any of the three trajectories with pain than those with intact cognition, due to inability to communicate and the difficulty in clinically evaluating pain in cognitively impaired individuals.

“Identifying residents likely to be underrepresented in the pain trajectories may provide impetus for nursing home staff to improve pain assessment and evaluation.”

Dr Hickman added: “The idea that there are trajectories of pain has relevance for a broader patient population beyond the nursing home setting. 

“There is a pressing need to better understand pain, how it changes over time, and what risk factors are associated, in particular, among older adults and those with cognitive impairment who are unable to express and report their own experiences.”

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