Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study

Background: Pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients is challenging, because nurses need to decode pain behaviour, interpret pain scores, and make appropriate decisions. This clinical reasoning process is inherent to advanced nursing practice, but is poorly understood. A better understand...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gerber, A., Thevoz, A., Ramelet, Anne-Sylvie
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Ireland Ltd 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14510
_version_ 1848748641987067904
author Gerber, A.
Thevoz, A.
Ramelet, Anne-Sylvie
author_facet Gerber, A.
Thevoz, A.
Ramelet, Anne-Sylvie
author_sort Gerber, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients is challenging, because nurses need to decode pain behaviour, interpret pain scores, and make appropriate decisions. This clinical reasoning process is inherent to advanced nursing practice, but is poorly understood. A better understanding of this process could contribute to improved pain assessment and management. Objective: This study aimed to describe the indicators that influence expert nurses' clinical reasoning when assessing pain in critically ill nonverbal patients. Methods: This descriptive observational study was conducted in the adult intensive care unit (ICU) of a tertiary referral hospital in Western Switzerland. A purposive sample of expert nurses, caring for nonverbal ventilated patients who received sedation and analgesia, were invited to participate in the study. Data were collected in "real life" using recorded think-aloud combined with direct non-participant observation and brief interviews. Data were analysed using deductive and inductive content analyses using a theoretical framework related to clinical reasoning and pain. Results: Seven expert nurses with an average of 7.85 (±3.1) years of critical care experience participated in the study. The patients had respiratory distress (n= 2), cardiac arrest (n= 2), sub-arachnoid bleeding (n= 1), and multi-trauma (n= 2). A total of 1344 quotes in five categories were identified. Patients' physiological stability was the principal indicator for making decision in relation to pain management.Results also showed that it is a permanent challenge for nurses to discriminate situations requiring sedation from situations requiring analgesia. Expert nurses mainly used working knowledge and patterns to anticipate and prevent pain. Conclusions: Patient's clinical condition is important for making decision about pain in critically ill nonverbal patients. The concept of pain cannot be assessed in isolation and its assessment should take the patient's clinical stability and sedation into account. Further research is warranted to confirm these results.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:08:17Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-14510
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:08:17Z
publishDate 2015
publisher Elsevier Ireland Ltd
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-145102017-09-13T14:06:28Z Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study Gerber, A. Thevoz, A. Ramelet, Anne-Sylvie Background: Pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients is challenging, because nurses need to decode pain behaviour, interpret pain scores, and make appropriate decisions. This clinical reasoning process is inherent to advanced nursing practice, but is poorly understood. A better understanding of this process could contribute to improved pain assessment and management. Objective: This study aimed to describe the indicators that influence expert nurses' clinical reasoning when assessing pain in critically ill nonverbal patients. Methods: This descriptive observational study was conducted in the adult intensive care unit (ICU) of a tertiary referral hospital in Western Switzerland. A purposive sample of expert nurses, caring for nonverbal ventilated patients who received sedation and analgesia, were invited to participate in the study. Data were collected in "real life" using recorded think-aloud combined with direct non-participant observation and brief interviews. Data were analysed using deductive and inductive content analyses using a theoretical framework related to clinical reasoning and pain. Results: Seven expert nurses with an average of 7.85 (±3.1) years of critical care experience participated in the study. The patients had respiratory distress (n= 2), cardiac arrest (n= 2), sub-arachnoid bleeding (n= 1), and multi-trauma (n= 2). A total of 1344 quotes in five categories were identified. Patients' physiological stability was the principal indicator for making decision in relation to pain management.Results also showed that it is a permanent challenge for nurses to discriminate situations requiring sedation from situations requiring analgesia. Expert nurses mainly used working knowledge and patterns to anticipate and prevent pain. Conclusions: Patient's clinical condition is important for making decision about pain in critically ill nonverbal patients. The concept of pain cannot be assessed in isolation and its assessment should take the patient's clinical stability and sedation into account. Further research is warranted to confirm these results. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14510 10.1016/j.aucc.2014.06.002 Elsevier Ireland Ltd restricted
spellingShingle Gerber, A.
Thevoz, A.
Ramelet, Anne-Sylvie
Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study
title Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study
title_full Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study
title_fullStr Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study
title_full_unstemmed Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study
title_short Expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: A descriptive study
title_sort expert clinical reasoning and pain assessment in mechanically ventilated patients: a descriptive study
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/14510