Pain Unit, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Robert Debré, 75019 Paris, France.
BMC Pediatr. 2011 Oct 12;11:87. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-11-87.
Assessment of pain in children is an important aspect of pain management and can be performed by observational methods or by self-assessment. The Faces Pain Scale-Revised (FPS-R) is a self-report tool which has strong positive correlations with other well established self-report pain intensity measures. It has been recommended for measuring pain intensity in school-aged children (4 years and older). The objective of this study is to compare the concordance and the preference for two versions, electronic and paper, of the FPS-R, and to determine whether an electronic version of the FPS-R can be used by children aged 4 and older.
The study is an observational, multicenter, randomized, cross-over, controlled, open trial. Medical and surgical patients in two pediatric hospitals (N=202, age 4-12 years, mean age 8.3 years, 58% male) provided self-reports of their present pain using the FPS-R on a personal digital assistant (PDA) and on a paper version. Paper and electronic versions of the FPS-R were administered by a nurse in a randomized order: half the patients were given the PDA version first and the other half the paper version first. The time between the administrations was planned to be less than 30 minutes but not simultaneous. Two hundred and thirty-seven patients were enrolled; 35 were excluded from analysis because of misunderstanding of instructions or abnormal time between the two assessments.
Final population for analysis comprised 202 children. The overall weighted Kappa was 0.846 (95%CI: 0.795; 0.896) and the Spearman correlation between scores on the two versions was rs=0.911 (p<0.0001). The mean difference of pain scores was less than 0.1 out of 10, which was neither statistically nor clinically significant; 83.2% of children chose the same face on both versions of the FPS-R. Preference was not modified by order, sex, age, hospitalization unit (medical or surgical units), or previous analgesics. The PDA was preferred by 87.4% of the children who expressed a preference.
The electronic version of the FPS-R can be recommended for use with children aged 4 to 12, either in clinical trials or in hospitals to monitor pain intensity.
儿童疼痛评估是疼痛管理的一个重要方面,可以通过观察法或自我评估进行。修订后的面部表情疼痛量表(FPS-R)是一种自我报告工具,与其他经过充分验证的自我报告疼痛强度测量方法具有很强的正相关性。它已被推荐用于测量学龄儿童(4 岁及以上)的疼痛强度。本研究的目的是比较两种版本(电子和纸质)FPS-R 的一致性和偏好,并确定电子版本的 FPS-R 是否可以用于 4 岁及以上的儿童。
本研究为观察性、多中心、随机、交叉、对照、开放性临床试验。在两家儿童医院的 202 名(4-12 岁,平均年龄 8.3 岁,58%为男性)医疗和手术患儿,使用个人数字助理(PDA)和纸质版的 FPS-R 对其当前疼痛进行自我报告。护士以随机顺序分别为患儿发放纸质版和电子版的 FPS-R:一半患儿先接受 PDA 版本,另一半先接受纸质版本。两次评估之间的时间计划不到 30 分钟,但不是同时进行。共纳入 237 例患儿;因未按说明操作或两次评估时间异常,35 例患儿被排除分析。
最终分析人群包括 202 例儿童。总体加权 Kappa 值为 0.846(95%CI:0.795;0.896),两种版本评分之间的 Spearman 相关系数为 rs=0.911(p<0.0001)。两种版本的疼痛评分差值均小于 10 分的 0.1 分,无论在统计学上还是临床上均无显著差异;83.2%的患儿在两种 FPS-R 版本上选择了相同的面孔。偏好不受顺序、性别、年龄、住院科室(内科或外科)或之前使用的镇痛药的影响。表达偏好的儿童中有 87.4%更喜欢 PDA。
电子版本的 FPS-R 可推荐用于 4 至 12 岁儿童,无论是临床试验还是医院监测疼痛强度。