Jennifer N Stinson1, Lindsay A Jibb, Chitra Lalloo, Brian M Feldman, Patrick J McGrath, Guy C Petroz, David Streiner, Annie Dupuis, Navreet Gill, Bonnie J Stevens. 1. *Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing Departments of ‡Anaesthesia ∥Pediatrics ‡‡Psychiatry ¶Institute of Health Policy Management & Evaluation #Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto †The Hospital for Sick Children, Child Health Evaluative Sciences §§Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care, Toronto §Medical Sciences Graduate Program, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON **Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia ††IWK Health Centre, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The current study investigated the construct validity of a multidimensional pain diary for youth with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and also compared participants' responses on electronic and retrospective diary measures. The purpose of the latter part of this study was to compare absolute agreement, between-person and within-person consistency and judged change in weekly pain between these 2 methods of assessing pain. METHODS: A total of 70 adolescents with juvenile idiopathic arthritis completed both weekly recalled and momentary reports of pain over a 2-week period and assessed their change in pain over the 2-week period using a 5-point global change in pain scale. The Pearson correlations and intraclass correlation coefficients were computed to demonstrate 3 different ways of comparing the measures on both between-person and within-person basis. RESULTS: Momentary ratings of pain episodes were consistently greater than weekly ratings of recalled pain. Moderate to strong consistency and agreement correlations were computed for between-person momentary and recalled pain intensity. However, these correlations were much weaker when the within-person data were analyzed. The judged change in pain across weeks was significantly associated with computed change in both average momentary and recalled pain. DISCUSSION: This is one of the few studies to explore the relationship between the measurement methods of pain recall and momentary assessment in adolescents. The poor within-person correlations observed have important implications for research design and practice in pediatric pain.
OBJECTIVE: The current study investigated the construct validity of a multidimensional pain diary for youth with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and also compared participants' responses on electronic and retrospective diary measures. The purpose of the latter part of this study was to compare absolute agreement, between-person and within-person consistency and judged change in weekly pain between these 2 methods of assessing pain. METHODS: A total of 70 adolescents with juvenile idiopathic arthritis completed both weekly recalled and momentary reports of pain over a 2-week period and assessed their change in pain over the 2-week period using a 5-point global change in pain scale. The Pearson correlations and intraclass correlation coefficients were computed to demonstrate 3 different ways of comparing the measures on both between-person and within-person basis. RESULTS: Momentary ratings of pain episodes were consistently greater than weekly ratings of recalled pain. Moderate to strong consistency and agreement correlations were computed for between-person momentary and recalled pain intensity. However, these correlations were much weaker when the within-person data were analyzed. The judged change in pain across weeks was significantly associated with computed change in both average momentary and recalled pain. DISCUSSION: This is one of the few studies to explore the relationship between the measurement methods of pain recall and momentary assessment in adolescents. The poor within-person correlations observed have important implications for research design and practice in pediatric pain.
Authors: Lindsay A Jibb; James S Khan; Puneet Seth; Chitra Lalloo; Lauren Mulrooney; Kathryn Nicholson; Dominik A Nowak; Harneel Kaur; Alyssandra Chee-A-Tow; Joel Foster; Jennifer N Stinson Journal: J Med Internet Res Date: 2020-06-16 Impact factor: 5.428
Authors: Kristen S Higgins; Perri R Tutelman; Christine T Chambers; Holly O Witteman; Melanie Barwick; Penny Corkum; Doris Grant; Jennifer N Stinson; Chitra Lalloo; Sue Robins; Rita Orji; Isabel Jordan Journal: Pain Rep Date: 2018-09-11
Authors: Sonia Butler; Dean Sculley; Derek Santos; Antoni Fellas; Xavier Gironès; Davinder Singh-Grewal; Andrea Coda Journal: J Med Internet Res Date: 2022-02-02 Impact factor: 5.428