Nursing assistants' use of best practices and pain in older adults living in nursing homes

Author:

Song Yuting12ORCID,Bolt Sascha3,Thorne Trina2,Norton Peter4,Poss Jeff5,Fu Fangfang2,Squires Janet6,Cummings Greta7,Estabrooks Carole A.2

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing Qingdao University Qingdao China

2. Faculty of Nursing University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

3. School of Social and Behavioral Sciences Tilburg University Tilburg Netherlands

4. Department of Family Medicine University of Calgary Calgary Canada

5. School of Public Health Sciences University of Waterloo Waterloo Canada

6. School of Nursing University of Ottawa Ottawa Canada

7. College of Health Sciences University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundInadequate pain management persists in nursing homes. Nursing assistants provide the most direct care in nursing homes, and significantly improving the quality of care requires their adoption of best care practices informed by the best available evidence. We assessed the association between nursing assistants' use of best practices and residents' pain levels.MethodsWe performed a cross‐sectional analysis of data collected between September 2019 and February 2020 from a stratified random sample of 87 urban nursing homes in western Canada. We linked administrative data (the Resident Assessment Instrument‐Minimum Data Set [RAI‐MDS], 2.0) for 10,093 residents and survey data for 3547 nursing assistants (response rate: 74.2%) at the care unit level. Outcome of interest was residents' pain level, measured by the pain scale derived from RAI‐MDS, 2.0. The exposure variable was nursing assistants' use of best practices, measured with validated self‐report scales and aggregated to the unit level. Two‐level random‐intercept multinomial logistic regression accounted for the clustering effect of residents within care units. Covariates included resident demographics and clinical characteristics and characteristics of nursing assistants, unit, and nursing home.ResultsOf the residents, 3305 (30.3%) were identified as having pain. On resident care units with higher levels of best practice use among nursing assistants, residents had 32% higher odds of having mild pain (odds ratio, 1.32; 95% confidence interval, 1.01–1.71; p = 0.040), compared with residents on care units with lower levels of best practice use among nursing assistants. The care units did not differ in reported moderate or severe pain among residents.ConclusionsWe observed that higher unit‐level best practice use among nursing assistants was associated with mild resident pain. This association warrants further research to identify key individual and organizational factors that promote effective pain assessment and management.

Funder

Ministry of Health, British Columbia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

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