Relationship of Cues to Assessed Infant Pain Level

Cues that 46 pediatric nurses with a BS in Nursing reported as key to their pain assessments of 88 videotaped infants, ages 0 to 12 months, are identified. Frequencies with which these cues were used for infants of different ages and the relationships between key cues and assessed levels of pain are...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical nursing research 1996-02, Vol.5 (1), p.43-66
Hauptverfasser: Fuller, Barbara, Thomson, Michelle, Conner, Douglas A., Scaniian, James
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container_title Clinical nursing research
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creator Fuller, Barbara
Thomson, Michelle
Conner, Douglas A.
Scaniian, James
description Cues that 46 pediatric nurses with a BS in Nursing reported as key to their pain assessments of 88 videotaped infants, ages 0 to 12 months, are identified. Frequencies with which these cues were used for infants of different ages and the relationships between key cues and assessed levels of pain are described. Greater pain was strongly associated with tears, stiff posture, guarding, and fisting. Greater pain was moderately associated with inadequate type or dosage of analgesia, more recent surgery, Inconsolability, difficult to distract, does not focus on surroundings, frown, grimace, wrinkled face, flushed face, pain cry, and increased arousal in response to touch of sore area. Internurse variability in cue use was sizable. Most of the often-used cues had weak or no association with assessed pain level Only consolability, pain cry, grimace, and stiff posture were frequently used and correlated> .51 with assessed level of pain.
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subjects Assessment
Babies
Clinical Nursing Research
Cues
Evaluation
Female
Humans
Infant
Infant Behavior
Infant, Newborn
Male
Medical research
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing Assessment - methods
Pain
Pain - nursing
Pain - physiopathology
Pain - psychology
Pain in children
Pain Measurement - methods
Pediatric Nursing
Pediatrics
Practice
Videotape Recording
title Relationship of Cues to Assessed Infant Pain Level
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