The quality of life of people in chronic pain: Developing a pain and discomfort module for use with the WHOQOL
Authors:
V. L. Mason a;
S. M. Skevington a;
M. Osborn b
| Affiliations: | a WHO Field Centre for the Study of Quality of Life, Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, UK |
| b Palliative Care Team, Royal United Hospital, Bath, BA1 3NG, UK |
DOI:
10.1080/14768320601070746
Publication Frequency:
10 issues per year
First Published:
February
2008
Subjects:
Allied Health;
Behavioral Medicine;
Health & Illness;
Health Psychology;
Medical Sociology;
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Abstract
This article reports the development of a pain and discomfort module (PDM) designed to assess the full impact of quality of life (QoL) relating to chronic pain, which could be used with the generic World Health Organisation Quality of Life Assessment (WHOQOL). First, cognitive interviewing was completed with nine participants with chronic pain, for 108 items representing 10 pain-specific facets of QoL. Sixty-eight QoL items and 16 importance questions on pain were relevant, comprehensive, comprehensible and acceptable to users, and were confirmed to assess their purported concepts. Secondly, these items were pilot tested using a cross-sectional survey of 216 people with chronic pain, to investigate the preliminary psychometric properties of the PDM, and reduce its items statistically. All new facets were important to those with chronic pain. Sixteen items within four facets of pain relief, anger and frustration, vulnerability/fear/worry, and uncertainty were retained, and demonstrated acceptable to good internal consistency reliability (
= 0.77-0.85). The PDM is a self-administered, multidimensional subjective assessment of pain-related QoL, with potential to evaluate pain-relieving interventions, identify sufferer's needs, and for survey use.
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| Keywords: Chronic pain; quality of life; WHOQOL-100; cognitive interviewing; assessment |
| view references (38) |

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= 0.77-0.85). The PDM is a self-administered, multidimensional subjective assessment of pain-related QoL, with potential to evaluate pain-relieving interventions, identify sufferer's needs, and for survey use.
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