4.6 Article

The role of experiential knowledge in hospital nurses' management of pain-related agitation in people with dementia: An expert performance simulation study

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2021.104160

Keywords

Aggression; Agitation; Decision theory; Dementia; Experiential learning; Nursing knowledge; Nursing practice; Pain management; Patient simulation

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Col-lege of Nursing
  2. Dementia Centre for Research Collaboration.

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The study aims to identify the unique cognitive characteristics of nurses who accurately recognize pain-related agitation in dementia patients. It found that nurses with high formal knowledge about pain in dementia may lack the experience required to recognize pain-related agitation, and workplace experience and senior roles play a critical role in this recognition.
Background: Pain-related agitation in hospital patients with dementia presents a diagnostic challenge as patients often cannot explain their agitation. Generally, a deductive process is required of staff, culmi-nating in an analgesic trial. However, evidence suggests the deductions of hospital nurses may be flawed because they may not associate agitation in dementia with painful conditions, thereby missing key clin-ical cues. While analytical rule-based deduction applies explicit formal knowledge, cognitive scientists argue that tacit experiential knowledge, i.e., the unconscious classification of available cues, is equally important and is always involved.Aim: To identify the cognitive characteristics unique to nurses who accurately recognise pain-related agi-tation in a patient with dementia compared with nurses who do not.Methods: In this descriptive multivariate study, registered acute-care nurses undertook an original com-puterised virtual simulation requiring them to identify and manage pain-related agitation in a standard -ised patient with dementia. Process tracing methods captured nurses' simulation performances alongside their retrospective accounts of thinking. These were correlated with demographic characteristics related to seniority, workplace, training, experience and knowledge captured on a questionnaire. Dual processing theory enabled interpretation of intuitive and analytical cognitive processes.Findings: Registered medical and surgical nurses ( N = 274) participated from 10 hospitals. Although for-mal knowledge about pain in dementia was high (88%), only 13(4.7%) nurses identified pain-related agi-tation from an injury. These individuals took the longest and used the most cues, undertaking a detailed deductive search. Their recognition of pain-related cues demonstrated accurate experiential knowledge while another 16 nurses identified a fracture without linking the injury to agitation. Over three quarters (78%) of nurses decided on initial antipsychotic treatment. They were quick to decide, using the fewest cues, suggesting agitation was recognised as typical and familiar, with the solution well-known (albeit ineffective). Independent of other variables, nurses working in dementia-specific units, surgical units or with more seniority had increased odds of recognising pain, revealing the influence of workplace experi-ence. However, most surgical and dementia-unit nurses did not recognise pain.Conclusions: Hospital nurses have difficulty recognising when agitation in a patient with dementia is caused by pain. High formal knowledge about pain in dementia may not be sufficient to enable clini-cal recognition of pain in patients. Instead, nurses with experience in specific workplaces or senior roles may be better equipped to recognise pain-related agitation and deploy evidence-based approaches for agitation in a patient with dementia. Overall, these results lend support to the influence of experiential knowledge on performance.Tweetable abstract: In a virtual simulation, registered nurses with high formal knowledge about pain in dementia lacked the experience required to recognise pain-related agitation in a patient with dementia (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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