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Concept Analysis of Nurses' Identification of Pain in Demented Patients in a Nursing Home: Development of a Hybrid Model

Sung Ok Chang, PhD, RN, Younjae Oh, PhD, RN, Eun Young Park, PhD, RN, Geun Myun Kim, PhD, RN, Suk Yong Kil, PhD, RNCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 25 October 2009; received in revised form 16 May 2010; accepted 26 May 2010. published online 26 July 2010.
Corrected Proof

Abstract 

Pain is a subjective feeling, with no known biologic markers. Proof of its presence and measurement of intensity rely entirely on self-reporting by the patient. The hampered or abrogated ability of demented patients to report their pain is a major difficulty in pain assessment and management. The purpose of this study was to clarify and conceptualize pain identification in demented patients by nurses. The hybrid model of concept development was used in the development of a conceptual structure of pain in demented patients. Data were collected by literature review (theoretical phase) and among nurses caring for demented patients in three nursing homes in South Korea (fieldwork phase). The 13 nurses involved each reported >3 years' nursing home experience. In a hybrid model, pain identification in demented patients by nurses constituted an active daily process of integrating patient expressional cues during periods of pain and pain relief and involving three dimensions: identification schemes based on the stage and type of dementia, connecting assessments after each intervention, and cognitive efforts to establish the origin of pain. Identification of pain in demented patients by nurses is a complex process. More research is needed to formulate an assessment tool and pain management strategies for patients with dementia.

 College of Nursing, Korea University, Seoul, Korea

 Department of Nursing, Far-East University, Eumseong, Korea

 Department of Nursing, CHA University, Pochon, Korea

Corresponding Author InformationAddrress correspondence to Suk Yong Kil, PhD, RN, Associate Professor, Department of Nursing, College of Health Science CHA University, 198-1 Donggyo-dong, Pochon-si, Gyeonggi-do 487-010, Korea.

 Supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea grant funded by the Korean government (KRF-2008-531-E00095).

PII: S1524-9042(10)00086-X

doi:10.1016/j.pmn.2010.05.007