Pain assessment tools in paediatric palliative care: A systematic review of psychometric properties and recommendations for clinical practice

Title

Pain assessment tools in paediatric palliative care: A systematic review of psychometric properties and recommendations for clinical practice

Creator

Chan AY; Ge M; Harrop E; Johnson M; Oulton K; Skene SS; Wong IC; Jamieson L; Howard RF; Liossi C

Publisher

Palliative Medicine

Date

2021

Subject

paediatrics; pain assessment; Pain measurement; palliative care; systematic review

Description

BACKGROUND: Assessing pain in infants, children and young people with life-limiting conditions remains a challenge due to diverse patient conditions, types of pain and often a reduced ability or inability of patients to communicate verbally. AIM: To systematically identify pain assessment tools that are currently used in paediatric palliative care and examine their psychometric properties and feasibility and make recommendations for clinical practice. DESIGN: A systematic literature review and evaluation of psychometric properties of pain assessment tools of original peer-reviewed research published from inception of data sources to April 2021. DATA SOURCES: PsycINFO via ProQuest, Web of Science Core, Medline via Ovid, EMBASE, BIOSIS and CINAHL were searched from inception to April 2021. Hand searches of reference lists of included studies and relevant reviews were performed. RESULTS: From 1168 articles identified, 201 papers were selected for full-text assessment. Thirty-four articles met the eligibility criteria and we examined the psychometric properties of 22 pain assessment tools. Overall, the Faces Pain Scale-Revised (FPS-R) had high cross-cultural validity, construct validity (hypothesis testing) and responsiveness; while the Faces, Legs, Activity, Cry and Consolability (FLACC) scale and Paediatric Pain Profile (PPP) had high internal consistency, criterion validity, reliability and responsiveness. The number of studies per psychometric property of each pain assessment tool was limited and the methodological quality of included studies was low. CONCLUSION: Balancing aspects of feasibility and psychometric properties, the FPS-R is recommended for self-assessment, and the FLACC scale/FLACC Revised and PPP are the recommended observational tools in their respective age groups.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

February 2022 List

Collection

Citation

Chan AY; Ge M; Harrop E; Johnson M; Oulton K; Skene SS; Wong IC; Jamieson L; Howard RF; Liossi C, “Pain assessment tools in paediatric palliative care: A systematic review of psychometric properties and recommendations for clinical practice,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 25, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/17792.