ABSTRACT
The aim of this study is to compare the assessment of pain in 200 elderly persons participating in five senior day care programs, as rated by family caregivers, day care staff members, and the participants themselves. Staff members and participants provided information in a face-to-face interview. Family members provided information about the participants and their demographic characteristics via a mailed questionnaire. Agreement rates among informants ranged between 63% and 69%, showing moderate agreement rates. Health status (as reflected in number of medications taken and the presence of a diagnosis of musculoskeletal disease) and depression were associated with ratings of pain by all the informants. The assessment of pain in the elderly population is very difficult and there is a need for reliable and valid pain assessments to be used by different raters. The relationship between pain, depression and other variables should be further explored.
Subject(s)
Day Care, Medical/methods , Pain Measurement/methods , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Female , Humans , Male , Middle AgedABSTRACT
Two hundred participants (mean age = 80 years) from five senior day-care centers were included in a study of agitation. Staff members at the centers and participants' relatives rated the frequency with which participants displayed agitated behaviors, via an expanded version of the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory. The most frequent behaviors noted were general restlessness, repetitious sentences, verbal interruptions, and pacing. A three-factor solution for staff members' ratings included (a) physically nonaggressive behaviors, including general restlessness and pacing; (b) verbally agitated behaviors, including complaining and constant requests for attention; and (c) aggressive verbal behaviors, including cursing and temper outbursts. A three-factor solution for relatives' ratings included (a) physically nonaggressive behaviors, including general restlessness and pacing; (b) verbally agitated behaviors, including constant requests for attention and related interruptions; and (c) aggressive behaviors, including cursing, grabbing, kicking, and pushing. The syndromes of both models showed similarity to the factors found in a nursing home population, although differences were also apparent.