An exploration of pain management for people with learning difficulties who have dementia.
As people with learning difficulties live longer, they are increasingly developing the conditions of older age, such as dementia. It is known that the recognition of pain and its treatment is inadequate for the general population who have dementia. This report identifies similar trends in pain management for people with learning difficulties and dementia.
The report:
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In general, the pain relief needs of older people with dementia are not adequately met. The aim of this research was to determine whether the same unsatisfactory treatment also applies to people with learning difficulties who have dementia and, if so, to make recommendations for improving practice. The research team was based at the Centre for Research on Families and Relationships, University of Edinburgh, and the Dementia Services Development Centre, University of Stirling. The researchers sought to develop an understanding of how older people with learning difficulties and dementia experience pain and to explore how these are managed. The team interviewed and observed people with learning difficulties and dementia, support staff and other professionals involved in their care and treatment. They found that:
A number of studies have identified that the detection and management of pain in older people and people with dementia is a problem. The majority of these studies identified a range of issues that result in physical pain being inadequately treated in these groups.
Limited research has been undertaken on the pain management needs of people with learning difficulties who have dementia, yet they will experience high levels of physical health needs that will, as a consequence, result in pain.
All the literature reviewed on pain and the needs of people with learning difficulties focused on children and young people; there appears to be little recognition of the pain care needs of older people with learning difficulties in general, as well as those with both learning difficulties and dementia.
This study aimed to examine the specific issues that facilitate or impede the appropriate identification and management of pain for an older person with learning difficulties and dementia. The researchers looked at determining what positive systems are in operation to identify and treat pain in older people with learning difficulties, as well as what barriers exist to effective pain management.
The researchers identified a number of factors contributing to poor pain recognition.
For a variety of reasons, people with learning difficulties more often present with behaviour that challenges their carers and services than their non-disabled peers. If someone already has a history of behaviour that others find challenging, it is often difficult to determine if the behaviour exhibited is a repeat of previous behaviour, new behaviour unrelated to pain or behaviour which may be caused by pain. Staff who are primed to interpret behaviour as challenging may not readily consider other potential meanings, such as it being a response to an experience of pain.
"I think it is seen as 'behaviour' before 'pain'."
(Manager)"She's very challenging, physically aggressive, verbally aggressive. I've been told that if she's in so much pain she wouldn't be able to lash out...I've been told that by a physiotherapist...it is just seen as challenging behaviour."
(Staff member)
People with dementia have difficulties with communication. The people with learning difficulties in this study had lost many skills of communication. As a consequence of the dementia, they had also lost the sense of 'the geography of their body'. This meant they could not accurately indicate where their pain was.
"She will point to other areas. She will point to her stomach or her head and it is really in her mouth."
(Staff member)
Interviewees often expressed the belief that people with learning difficulties have a high pain threshold. This belief means that staff are not necessarily disposed to interpret behaviour as resulting from pain, if they believe that the person is not as likely to experience pain to the same extent or intensity as non-disabled people.
"Their pain threshold is so high that sometimes you can have behavioural problems before you realise that it's actually pain that they're suffering from."(Staff member)
"A great percentage of people with learning disabilities also have extremely high pain thresholds." (Staff member)
Many older people with learning difficulties will have had experiences of pain treatment that were distressing or have had their pain ignored. This particularly applied to people in the study who had previously lived in institutions.
"In the old days it was a matter of suffering in silence." (Staff member who had previously worked in long-stay hospital)
A critical factor in the recognition of pain was the extent to which staff had an understanding and knowledge of the person with dementia. Interviewees identified agency or bank staff as not having this knowledge.
People with learning difficulties interviewed for this study were generally able to articulate their distress and pain, and so more able than many to elicit pain relief. They were, however, still not getting adequate pain relief, either in the form of analgesia or from non-drug interventions. One area where untreated pain that caused particular concern was pain experienced at night. Such pain exacerbates the night-time waking that can be a characteristic behaviour of people with dementia.
"My hip hurts...I can't lie on that, I feel it in bed." (Woman with dementia)
There was evidence throughout the study that although pain was sometimes considered in relation to people with dementia, staff were not sufficiently conscious of pain as a possible explanation for types of behaviour. Staff did, however, play a vital role in providing GPs with critical information that assisted in the assessment and diagnosis of pain.
"I would take more notice of the views of experienced staff...than I would probably from my own observations." (GP)
The need for GPs to develop specialist skills was evident. GPs who took part in this study had chosen to specialise. They were seen to have improved skills in relation to people with learning difficulties. Care staff identified a range of unsatisfactory practices amongst many GPs who had no specialist interest.
"We have had locums...you can tell the difference, there is not the relationship there." (Staff member)
There was a contradictory theme that ran through the interviews with members of the CLDT. Despite evidence that these staff were acutely aware that pain was an issue for people with learning difficulties, this did not seem to translate to the context of older people with learning difficulties and therefore people with dementia.
"Since receiving the leaflet about the pain study, two of the people with a learning disability and dementia, who had challenging behaviour we treated for pain and their behaviour has significantly changed for the better. We did not think that it might have been pain. I feel really bad that we didn't think about pain first." (Community nurse)
From this evidence, the researchers draw out the following recommendations for improving practice.
All staff involved with the care, support and treatment of people with learning difficulties and dementia need training in pain awareness, covering:
Agency and bank staff need the same training on pain recognition as other staff; the researchers recommend cautious use of agency/bank staff.
The following measures would help better day-to-day pain management:
Interventions by GPs could be improved by:
Members of the CLDT need to have:
The research team consisted of Diana Kerr, Colm Cunningham and Heather Wilkinson. The researchers worked in sites throughout the UK. Interviews were conducted with people with a learning difficulty and dementia (6), direct care staff (49), managers (12) GPs (6) and members of Community Learning Disability
Teams (13).