Table 3.
Pain Measure | Worst | Average | Current | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Level | n/N (%) | Adjusted RR (95% CI) | n/N (%) | Adjusted RR (95% CI) | n/N (%) | Adjusted RR (95% CI) |
None/Mild† | 13/71 (18) | Referent | 29/145 (20) | Referent | 71/331 (21) | Referent |
Moderate | 21/104 (20) | 1·1 (0·6–2·0) | 44/205 (21) | 1·0 (0·7–1·6) | 16/85 (19) | 0·9 (0·5–1·4) |
Severe | 72/284 (25) | 1·3 (0·8–2·2) | 33/105 (31) | 1·4 (0·9–2·3) | 19/43 (44) | 2·0 (1·4–3·0) |
| ||||||
Ptrend: | 0·146 | --- | 0·045 | --- | 0·013 | --- |
RR= Relative risk for delirium. Pain is modeled as a three-level categorical variable. Risk estimates are adjusted for age, gender, race, education level, and comorbidity. CI=confidence interval. n/N=fraction of delirious patients in pain category. The Cochran-Armitage test was used to whether the proportion of delirium is constant across pain categories. A significant Ptrend (≤0·05) indicates that rate of delirium changes linearly across increasing levels of pain.
None and mild pain levels were combined because few subjects rated worst or average pain with scores of 0.