A pilot study was designed to test the feasibility of routine quantitative dyspnea assessment by nurses during hospital admission to improve symptom recognition and management.
In Brief Overview Dyspnea assessment is valuable in diagnosis, prognosis, symptom management, and targeted intervention, and in the allotment and management of patient care resources. The assessment of dyspnea, like that of pain, depends on patient self-report. Expert consensus panels have called for dyspnea to be measured quantitatively and documented on a routine basis, as is the practice with pain. But little information is available on how to measure and record dyspnea ratings systematically. Consequently, the prevalence of dyspnea in hospital settings may be greater than is generally recognized, and dyspnea may be insufficiently managed. This article describes a pilot study that sought to test the feasibility of measuring dyspnea as part of the initial patient assessment performed by nurses within several inpatient units of a large urban hospital. A nurse-led pilot study sought to test the feasibility of measuring dyspnea as part of the initial patient assessment performed by nurses in a large urban hospital.
Baker et al. (Fri,) studied this question.