Pain management in home hospice patients : a retrospective descriptive study

Article indépendant

CAMPBELL, Cathy L. | KELLY, Meghan | ROVNYAK, Virginia

The development and evaluation of evidence-based, safe, and effective home-based pain management models for caregivers implementation is receiving greater attention in the literature because of international initiatives intended to increase the number of people who receive end-of-life care in home-based settings. The purpose of this "retrospective descriptive design" study was to describe pharmacological pain management and outcomes for 40 cancer and non-cancer patients receiving hospice care at home. While the median pain score was higher at admission in the cancer group than in the hospice care at home group, the difference was not significant at or within 48 hour of admission. Overall, there was a significant decrease in pain from the first measurement to the second. Within the last seven days of life, the majority of participants were not able to provide a pain severity score when asked to evaluate the effectiveness of pain management, thus their caregiver provided a proxy evaluation. Pain management was effective in the home setting. More research is needed on the best methods to teach lay caregivers to assess pain and evaluate the effectiveness of pharmacological modalities to manage pain.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nhs.12359/epdf

Voir la revue «Nursing and health sciences, 19»

Autres numéros de la revue «Nursing and health sciences»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Pain management in home hospice patients : a ...

Article | CAMPBELL, Cathy L. | Nursing and health sciences | n°3 | vol.19

The development and evaluation of evidence-based, safe, and effective home-based pain management models for caregivers implementation is receiving greater attention in the literature because of international initiatives intended ...

Pain management in home hospice patients : a ...

Article indépendant | CAMPBELL, Cathy L. | Nursing and health sciences | n°3 | vol.19

The development and evaluation of evidence-based, safe, and effective home-based pain management models for caregivers implementation is receiving greater attention in the literature because of international initiatives intended ...

Silent illumination : a case study exploring ...

Article | CAMPBELL, Cathy L. | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°6 | vol.21

With a growing population of transgender-identified elders in the United States, their unique spiritual end-of-life needs are coming to light. This article presents a case study of a hospice volunteer who used skillful means as an...

De la même série

Advance care planning in patients with stroke...

Article indépendant | YANG, Mengfei | Nursing and health sciences | n°2 | vol.27

This scoping review sought to provide an overview and characterization of the present state and experimental studies related to advance care planning (ACP) in patients with stroke. A comprehensive literature search was performed a...

Pain management in home hospice patients : a ...

Article indépendant | CAMPBELL, Cathy L. | Nursing and health sciences | n°3 | vol.19

The development and evaluation of evidence-based, safe, and effective home-based pain management models for caregivers implementation is receiving greater attention in the literature because of international initiatives intended ...

Systematic critical realist review of interve...

Article indépendant | SPACEY, Adam | Nursing and health sciences

The demand for high-quality end-of-life care is rising. Frequently evidenced concerns about the provision of end-of-life in care homes relate to inter-disciplinary communication and engagement in advance care planning. A number of...

Oncology nurses' perceptions of advance direc...

Article indépendant | HOBDEN, Breanne | Nursing and health sciences

This study examined oncology nurses' perceptions of the impact of advance directives on oncology patients' end-of-life care. Nurses (n=104) who were members of an oncology nursing society or worked in a large metropolitan cancer c...

Postgraduate nursing students' experiences of...

Article indépendant | LINDBERG, Elisabeth | Nursing and health sciences

Losing a loved one in the intensive care unit relates to a risk of developing stress and complicated grief. Education in intensive care nursing should cover end-of-life care, and the use of simulation in nursing education is a pow...

Chargement des enrichissements...