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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Sometimes questions of “where does it
hurt?” are not good enough, say researchers at The University
of Alabama.
While a patient describing their pain to a health care professional
is the most accurate method of gauging pain, Dr. Louis Burgio, professor
of psychology and co-director of UA’s Center for Mental Health
and Aging, said that is not always feasible.
“Most nursing home residents experience some degree of cognitive
impairment to the extent that relying on self-reporting for measuring
pain is problematic,” Burgio said.
The National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of
Nursing Research awarded Burgio a $141,000 grant to teach certified
nursing assistants and licensed practical nurses techniques to better
assess dementia patients’ pain and more effective ways of
communicating with these patients and with one another.
He and a UA psychology graduate student, Susan Fisher, are working
with nurses and nurse aides in three Tuscaloosa-area nursing homes
owned by Northport Health Services and one Birmingham nursing home.
Dementia patients in pain often give non-communicative cues to
their pain, but these cues are not always interpreted, Burgio said.
The project also aims to explore how improvements in pain assessment
and communication could impact the extent to which painkillers are
prescribed for dementia patients.
Established in 2002, the UA Center for Mental Health and Aging’s
mission is to develop new knowledge, test new interventions, and
disseminate information related to mental health and again. Through
applied interdisciplinary research, the CMHA promotes improved quality
of life for older adults.
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