Assessment of Pain in Children
Assessment of Pain in Children
Assessment of Pain in Children
Diagnosis of Pain
The Doctor?
Who is the person most likely to notice when a child is in pain? The Nurse? The Parents?
At St Margarets/St Laurences /St Andrews Who is the pain expert for the children? The Nurse
The Doctor
The Parent
Psychological background.
Fear - previous experience of pain. Unfamiliar surroundings/people. Most children want company when in pain.
What Influences How Nurse and Doctors Assess and Deal With Pain in Children ?
Pain Assessment
Determining the level of pain in a child is often difficult but is first step to managing the pain. Each child will feel pain of differing levels and degrees and react to this and cope in his or her own way. In order to cope with pain in children we should try to have a reliable reproducible measure of pain used on a regular basis. Yes but How ???
True or False?
Assessing Pain in Children Who Can Both Understand and Communicate their Experiences
If possible try to find out.
The level of their understanding of their condition Where the pain is - frequency and duration? What causes the pain - is there anything which makes it better or worse? What significance does the pain have for the child? How do they cope with the pain ? What effect does it have on their life?
In All Children (talking or not able to talk). Pain can be measured by. Biological Markers.
How their bodies react.
Behaviour.
What children do.
General behaviour
Changed behaviour Mood -Irritability or depression Unusual posture Screaming Reluctance to move Lying scared stiff Aggressiveness Increased clinginess Unusually quiet Poor appetite Restlessness Whimpering/sobbing Lethargy Disturbed sleep pattern
Biological Markers
Markers i.e. Pulse , Blood pressure, Respiratory rate. Use in Conjunction with other data about pain assessment. Body may adapt i.e. biological markers may erroneously suggest reduction in longstanding pain especially Change is more important than the actual reading. Dont use as sole method of assessment.
Faces Scales
The Oucher
PATCh Scale
Is pain better or worse for a child who cant communicate than one who can?
Is Pain Better or Worse for a Child Who Cant Communicate Than One Who Can?
INRS Questionnaire
Think about childs behaviour in the past when child has been in mild pain, moderate pain or severe pain. Fill in on the diagram typical pain behaviours where 0 is no pain and 10 is the worst possible pain. Produces a check list of behaviours. Is reproducible and especially useful for carers who dont know the child as well. Based on FLACC Face Legs Activity, Cry and Consolability.
Facial expression.
i.e. squinting eyes, frowning, distorted face, grinds teeth thrusts tongue etc.
Activity.
i.e. Uncooperative, irritable, unhappy, not moving, less active quiet or more active/fidgety.
Cry or vocalisation.
moaning, whimpering, crying, yelling.
Consolability.
less interaction, seeks comfort or physical closeness, difficult to distract/satisfy.
Other changes.
tears, sweating, breath holding, gasping.
Case example: Timmy 5 year old with cerebral palsy and severe learning disability. Initially scale completed by mother but nursing staff wrote in additional observations
Summary
Nurses/carers are the most important member of the team in assessing childrens pain especially in non-verbal children Pain assessment tools help to quantify pain and evaluate effectiveness of treatment Observation and interpretation of individual childs response to pain is essential in assessing pain especially in non-verbal child