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Pain assessment: is a multidimensional observational assessment of a patients experience of pain. Pain measurement tools: are instruments designed to measure pain.
Ask the patient if they are experiencing any pain using questions like the following. Do you have pain/are you aching or hurting anywhere right now? Where do you have pain/are you aching or hurting? How long have you been in pain/aching/hurting? Does pain/aching ever keep you from sleeping at night?
Pain must be assessed using a multidimensional approach, with determination of the following: Onset: Mechanism of injury or etiology of pain, if identifiable. Location/Distribution. Duration. Course or Temporal Pattern. Character Quality of the pain. Aggravating/Provoking factors. Alleviating factors. Associated symptoms.
McGill pain questionnaire (MPQ) This is one of the most widely used multidimensional pain scales. It appears in questionnaire form, and assesses a persons pain based on the words they use to describe their pain.
PQRST Pain Assessment Method P = Provocation/Palliation. What were you doing when the pain started? Q = Quality/Quantity. What does it feel like? R = Region/Radiation. Where is the pain located? S = Severity Scale. T = Timing. Documentation.
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The WILDA approach to pain assessmentfocusing on words to describe pain, intensity, location, duration, and aggravating or alleviating factorsoffers a concise template for assessment in patients with acute and chronic pain.
Start your assessments by asking patients to rate their pain on a scale from 0 to 10, with 10 being the worst possible pain and 0 being no pain. Where are you feeling pain? When did the pain start? How long have you been in pain?
Guides healthcare professionals through an initial assessment of patient pain. Includes diagrams of the human body to help patients locate the pain they experience, as well as questions to prompt the patient to describe the intensity, quality, causes, effects, and contributing factors of the pain.

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