The purpose of this study is to learn if the Pain in Advanced Dementia (PAINAD) scale can improve emergency pain care in persons living with dementia (PLWD). It is hypothesized that a PAINAD electronic health record (EHR) prompt that appears to emergency department (ED) staff will enable them to accurately assess pain levels and lead to better pain treatment for PLWD.
This is a pragmatic pilot for a Stage IV effectiveness, embedded pragmatic clinical trial (ePCT) studying the feasibility of PAINAD assessment implementation via simple EHR prompts for PLWD presenting to the ED with hip pain at the University of Chicago Medicine (UCM) and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH). Identification of subjects with hip pain and dementia contains the level of specificity needed for a pragmatic trial, and occurs on ED arrival, prompting an electronic health record clinical decision support (CDS). The Pain in Advance Dementia (PAINAD) Score is a behavioral score based on observation of the person. The score depends on observation of five behaviors, breathing, negative vocalizations, facial expressions, body language, and consolability. Each observed behavior is scored from zero = none, to two = most, for a total score from zero to ten. The design is an interrupted time series intervention, which allows a pre- and post-intervention assessment of the effect of PAINAD scale. Pre-intervention data from most immediate year to date prior to the intervention start defines the baseline state. The intervention, the EHR prompt to document the PAINAD first on patient arrival to the ED treatment area, and second one hour after delivery of first pain treatment. Prospective evaluation of EHR data will be used to evaluate use of the PAINAD.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
714
Implementation of PAINAD EHR prompt in the ED workflow for PLWD presenting to the ED with hip pain
University of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Percentage of eligible patients receiving a PAINAD assessment upon ED arrival
Measured by numbers of patients
Time frame: 10 months post-implementation of PAINAD CDS in the ED
Change in time to administration of first analgesic medication
Measured by length of time in minutes
Time frame: Baseline (end of 1 year preceding implementation), 10 months
Change in pain score for patients receiving a repeat PAINAD assessment
Measured by PAINAD score; scores range from 0 to 10 (based on a scale of 0 to 2 for five items), with a higher score indicating more severe pain (0="no pain" to 10="severe pain")
Time frame: Baseline (end of 1 year preceding implementation), 10 months
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