Cognitive impairment and its influence on pain and symptom assessment in a palliative care unit: development of a Minimal Documentation System
Abstract
Symptom assessment in the palliative care
unit must consider the reduced physical and mental status of the
patients. Standardized
instruments are often not completed by patients
with cognitive impairment. We tried to combine minimal burden for
patients
and staff with sufficient information content in a
Minimal Documentation System (MIDOS) for pain and symptom assessment in
palliative care patients.
From January to July 1998, 108 patients
(123 consecutive admissions) with a mean age of 63 years (range 32–87
years) were
admitted to the palliative care unit. Pain was
reported as the reason for admission in 70% of the patients, and 71%
were treated
with opioids. Using a cut-off point of 20/21, 35%
of the patients were impaired in the Mini Mental State Examination
(MMSE).
The number of missing values in the Brief Pain
Inventory (BPI) and the quality-of-life questionnaire SF-12 correlated
highly
with each other and with the MMSE sum score, but
not with the summary scores of BPI or SF-12. Only 31 patients completed
the
SF-12 quality-of-life questionnaire. Age was not
correlated to MMSE scores, and neither were opioid doses for 26 patients
with slow-release oral morphine or for 20 patients
with transdermal fentanyl.
Only a minority of patients was able to
use the numerical scale for symptoms other than pain, though most
patients were able
to score symptom intensity on the verbal
categorical scale. Pain and symptom assessments were performed by the
physician for
17% of the patients at admission, and for 16% of
the follow-up controls because self-assessment was not possible.
In this study, cognitive impairment
prevented symptom assessment with longer and more complicated
instruments such as the
SF-12 in a large number of the patients admitted to
the palliative care unit. Assessment instruments for patients with
advanced
disease must provide simple categorical scales and
the possibility of being administered by interview.
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