Title
Evaluating pain in intensive care.
Abstract
Optimal pain management is essential for good care outcomes, but assessing pain is particularly complex in intensive care, as patients are often unable to communicate. We hypothesize that the task could be supported through human language technology. To evaluate the feasibility of such tools, we study how pain is documented in electronic Finnish free-text intensive care nursing notes by statistically comparing annotations of ten nursing professionals on a set of 1548 documents. The aspects considered include the amount and writing style of pain-related notes, pain intensity, and given pain care. More than half of the documents contained information relevant for patients' pain status but it was expressed usually indirectly. Also pain medication was commented as free-text. Although annotators' pain intensity evaluations diverged, the substantial amount of pain-related notes encourages developing computational tools for pain assessment.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.3233/978-1-60750-024-7-192
Studies in Health Technology and Informatics
Keywords
Field
DocType
computerized patient records,decision-making,intensive care,natural language processing,pain
Critical care nursing,Medical emergency,Ambulatory care,Intensive care,Medicine
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
146
0926-9630
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.41
2
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Hanna Suominen136033.41
Heljä Lundgrén-Laine2255.74
Sanna Salanterä315121.92
Tapio Salakoski41513106.70