School of Science and Health, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Departments of Pain Medicine and Physiotherapy, Liverpool Hospital, Locked Bag 7103, Liverpool, NSW, 1871, Australia.
Health Qual Life Outcomes. 2019 Apr 8;17(1):56. doi: 10.1186/s12955-019-1126-9.
A comprehensive and accurate assessment of pain is critical for successful pain management. However, there is a lack of reliable and valid assessment tools for exploring multidimensional aspects of the chronic pain experience in culturally and linguistically diverse communities. This study investigates the reliability and validity of the Pictorial Representation of Illness and Self Measure + (PRISM+) for evaluating pain-related suffering and the sociocultural context of chronic pain within culturally and linguistically diverse patient cohorts.
Three prospective validation studies are reported for three culturally and linguistically diverse communities. Two hundred and fifty-one patients with chronic pain who self-identified as Assyrian (n = 85), Arabic (n = 83) or Vietnamese (n = 83) completed a PRISM+ assessment, alongside a battery of standardised pain assessments. To evaluate construct validity, the position of the 'pain' disk placement was correlated with the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS), and the Short-Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36). For content validity, thematic analysis of patient narratives accompanying each disk placement was conducted. Test-retest reliability of repeated 'pain' and five additional disks (PRISM+) values was analysed using intra-class correlation coefficients.
The PRISM pain assessment demonstrated moderate to good test-retest reliability for Arabic (ICC 0.76; 95% CI 0.65-0.84), Assyrian (ICC 0.65; 95% CI 0.50-0.76) and Vietnamese (ICC 0.82; 95% CI 0.73-0.88) patients. Moderate correlations between the PRISM 'pain' disk and sub-scores for the BPI, DASS and SF-36 were found (p < 0.001). Patient interpretations of the 'pain' disk aligned with accepted definitions of suffering, supporting content validity for PRISM. For the additional disks (PRISM+), moderate to good test-retest reliability (ICC 0.67-0.88) was observed and qualitative analysis highlighted each disk reflected social and cultural values.
The PRISM demonstrates acceptable psychometric properties for measuring pain-related suffering for participants with chronic pain across three culturally and linguistically diverse communities. The use of additional disks (PRISM+) presents a reliable and valid option for exploring social and cultural dimensions of chronic pain in clinical encounters.
全面准确地评估疼痛对于成功的疼痛管理至关重要。然而,在文化和语言多样化的社区中,缺乏可靠和有效的工具来探索慢性疼痛体验的多维方面。本研究旨在调查 Pictorial Representation of Illness and Self Measure +(PRISM+)评估疼痛相关痛苦和慢性疼痛的社会文化背景的可靠性和有效性,适用于文化和语言多样化的患者群体。
报告了三项针对三个文化和语言多样化社区的前瞻性验证研究。251 名自我认定为亚述人(n=85)、阿拉伯人(n=83)或越南人(n=83)的慢性疼痛患者完成了 PRISM+评估,以及一系列标准化疼痛评估。为了评估结构效度,将“疼痛”磁盘位置与Brief Pain Inventory(BPI)、抑郁焦虑和压力量表(DASS)和Short-Form 36 Health Survey(SF-36)进行相关性分析。为了评估内容效度,对每个磁盘位置的患者叙述进行了主题分析。使用组内相关系数分析了 PRISM+中重复“疼痛”和另外五个磁盘(PRISM+)值的测试-重测信度。
PRISM 疼痛评估对阿拉伯语(ICC 0.76;95%CI 0.65-0.84)、亚述语(ICC 0.65;95%CI 0.50-0.76)和越南语(ICC 0.82;95%CI 0.73-0.88)患者具有中等到良好的测试-重测信度。PRISM“疼痛”磁盘与 BPI、DASS 和 SF-36 的子量表之间存在中度相关性(p<0.001)。患者对“疼痛”磁盘的解释与公认的痛苦定义一致,支持 PRISM 的内容效度。对于另外五个磁盘(PRISM+),观察到中等到良好的测试-重测信度(ICC 0.67-0.88),定性分析强调每个磁盘都反映了社会和文化价值观。
PRISM 对三个文化和语言多样化社区的慢性疼痛患者的疼痛相关痛苦测量具有可接受的心理测量特性。使用额外的磁盘(PRISM+)为探索临床环境中的慢性疼痛的社会和文化维度提供了可靠和有效的选择。