Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Care, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, Irvine, California; Center on Stress and Health, University of California, Irvine, California; Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital of Orange County, Orange, California.
Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital of Orange County, Orange, California; Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine, Orange, California.
J Emerg Med. 2024 Jul;67(1):e50-e59. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2024.01.019. Epub 2024 Feb 2.
Despite improvements over the past decade, children continue to experience significant pain and distress surrounding invasive procedures in the emergency department (ED). To assess the impact of newly developed interventions, we must create more reliable and valid behavioral assessment tools that have been validated for the unique settings of pediatric EDs.
This study aimed to create and test the Emergency Department Child Behavior Coding System (ED-CBCS) for the assessment of child distress and nondistress behaviors surrounding pediatric ED procedures.
Via an iterative process, a multidisciplinary expert panel developed the ED-CBCS, an advanced time-based behavioral coding measure. Inter-rater reliability and concurrent validity were examined using 38 videos of children aged from 2 to 12 years undergoing laceration procedures. Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability (FLACC) scale scores were used to examine concurrent validity.
The final ED-CBCS included 27 child distress and nondistress behaviors. Time-unit κ values from 0.64 to 0.98 and event alignment κ values from 0.62 to 1.00 indicated good to excellent inter-rater reliability for all but one of the individual codes. ED-CBCS distress (B = 1.26; p < 0.001) and nondistress behaviors (B = -0.69, p = 0.025) were independently significantly associated with FLACC scores, indicating concurrent validity.
We developed a psychometrically sound tool tailored for pediatric ED procedures. Future work could use this measure to better identify behavioral targets and test the effects of interventions to relieve pediatric ED pain and distress.
尽管在过去十年中有所改善,但儿童在急诊科(ED)接受侵入性操作时仍会经历明显的疼痛和不适。为了评估新开发干预措施的影响,我们必须创建更可靠和有效的行为评估工具,这些工具已针对儿科 ED 的独特环境进行了验证。
本研究旨在创建和测试用于评估儿科 ED 手术周围儿童痛苦和非痛苦行为的急诊部儿童行为编码系统(ED-CBCS)。
通过迭代过程,一个多学科专家小组开发了 ED-CBCS,这是一种先进的基于时间的行为编码测量方法。使用 38 个年龄在 2 至 12 岁之间接受裂伤程序的儿童视频来检查评分者间信度和同时效度。使用面部、腿部、活动、哭声、安慰(FLACC)量表评分来检查同时效度。
最终的 ED-CBCS 包括 27 种儿童痛苦和非痛苦行为。除一个单独的代码外,所有代码的时间单位κ 值为 0.64 至 0.98,事件对齐κ 值为 0.62 至 1.00,表明评分者间信度良好至优秀。ED-CBCS 痛苦(B = 1.26;p < 0.001)和非痛苦行为(B = -0.69,p = 0.025)与 FLACC 评分独立显著相关,表明具有同时效度。
我们开发了一种针对儿科 ED 手术量身定制的心理测量学上合理的工具。未来的工作可以使用该措施更好地确定行为目标,并测试干预措施减轻儿科 ED 疼痛和不适的效果。