-
Journal of Pain Research
-
About Dovepress
Open access peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals.
-
Open Access
Dove Medical Press is now a member of the Open Access Initiative
-
An Author's Guide
A guide to help authors get their paper published.
-
Advocacy
Support Open Access and Dove Press
-
Reprints
Promotional Article Monitoring - further details
-
Favored Author Program
Real benefits for authors, including fast-track processing of papers.
A review and critique of assessment instruments for patients with persistent pain
Review
(4926) Views (1947) Full article downloads
Authors: Karen Grimmer-Somers, Nic Vipond, Saravana Kumar, Gillian Hall
Published Date March 2009
Volume 2009:2 Pages 21 - 47
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S4949
Karen Grimmer-Somers1, Nic Vipond2, Saravana Kumar1, Gillian Hall2
1Centre for Allied Health Evidence, University of South Australia, Australia; 2Accident Compensation Corporation, Wellington, New ZealandBackground: Early identification of individuals at risk of developing persistent pain is important to decrease unnecessary treatment costs and disability. However there is scant comprehensive information readily available to assist clinicians to choose appropriate assessment instruments with sound psychometric and clinical properties.
Objective: A national insurer commissioned the development of a compendium of assessment instruments to identify adults with, or at-risk of developing, persistent pain. This paper reports on the instrument identification and review process.
Methods: A comprehensive systematic literature review was undertaken of assessment instruments for persistent pain of noncancer origin, and their developmental literature. Only assessment instruments which were developed for patients with pain, or tested on them, were included. A purpose-built ‘Ready Reckoner’ scored psychometric properties and clinical utility.
Results: One hundred sixteen potentially useful instruments were identified, measuring severity, psychological, functional and/or quality of life constructs of persistent pain. Forty-five instruments were short-listed, with convincing psychometric properties and clinical utility. There were no standard tests for psychometric properties, and considerable overlap of instrument purpose, item construct, wording, and scoring.
Conclusion: No one assessment instrument captured all the constructs of persistent pain. While the compendium focuses clinicians’ choices, multiple instruments are required for comprehensive assessment of adults with persistent pain.
Keywords: persistent pain, assessment, psychometric properties, evidence-base, clinical utility
Other articles by Professor Karen Grimmer-Somers
Effectiveness of a physiotherapy-initiated telephone triage of orthopedic waitlist patientsExtended scope physiotherapy roles for orthopedic outpatients: an update systematic review of the literature
Measuring children’s distress during burns dressing changes: literature search for measures appropriate for indigenous children in South Africa
Measuring the impact of allied health research
Pillow use: the behavior of cervical stiffness, headache and scapular/arm pain
Primary care assessment instruments for patients at risk of, or with, persistent pain: opportunistic findings from a systematic literature review
Yellow flag scores in a compensable New Zealand cohort suffering acute low back pain
- Testimonials
"... I was impressed at the rapidity of publication from submission to final acceptance." Dr Edwin Thrower, PhD, Yale University
- An eight-week yoga intervention is associated with improvements in pain, psychological functioning and mindfulness, and changes in cortisol levels in women with fibromyalgia
- Problems and barriers of pain management in the emergency department: Are we ever going to get better?
- A new transmucosal drug delivery system for patients with breakthrough cancer pain: the fentanyl effervescent buccal tablet
- Anesthesiologists’ perception of patients’ anxiety under regional anesthesia




