Assessing Pain in Non-Intubated Critically Ill Patients Unable to Self Report: an Adaptation of the Behavioral Pain Scale

Gérald Chanques, Jean-François Payen, Grégoire Mercier, Sylvie de Lattre, Eric Viel, Boris Jung, Moussa Cissé, Jean-Yves Lefrant, Samir Jaber

 

Intensive Care Med 2009, Vol. 35

 

PURPOSE: To validate an adaptation of the Behavioral Pain Scale (BPS) for its use in non-intubated intensive care unit (ICU) patients unable to self-report their pain because of the occurrence of delirium. The ‘‘vocalization’’ domain was inserted to construct the BPS-non intubated (BPS-NI) scale, ranging from 3 (no pain) to 12 (most pain).

DESIGN: Prospective psychometric study in a medical-surgical ICU.

METHODS: The same physician and one bedside nurse rated pain in non-intubated patients unable to self-report

their pain during four conditions: before and after a catheter dressing change (non-nociceptive procedure) and before and after turning the patient (nociceptive procedure). Delirium was assessed by the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU).

RESULTS: A total of 120 paired evaluations were performed in 30 consecutive adult patients, 84% with delirium

(CAM-ICU positive). BPS-NI scores were higher during painful procedures than at rest [6.0 (5.0–8.0) vs. 3.0 (3.0–3.8); P\0.001], while no changes in BPS-NI scores were found during non-nociceptive procedures (discriminative validity). The BPS-NI had good internal consistency (standardized Cronbach a = 0.79), and

each domain reflected the pain expression factor in a balanced way (coefficients between 0.57 and 0.59). The BPS-NI had a good inter-rater reliability (weighted kappa coefficient = 0.89 for the four conditions

and 0.82 during nociceptive procedures) and a good responsiveness, with an effect size ranging from 1.5 to 3.6. CONCLUSIONS: Pain during procedures is perceived even in non-intubated ICU patients with delirium. In those patients, pain level can be assessed with the BPS-NI scale since this instrument exhibited good psychometric properties.

 

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Stiamo assistendo in Terapia Intensiva ad una profonda sfida culturale: pazienti svegli, parenti presenti, staff consapevole dei limiti e delle possibilità. Non è facile "cambiare testa", ma è il primo passo per stare meglio. Tutti.

Link veloci

Gestire il dolore

ico-flowchartdoloreFlowchart dolore
ico-vnrVNR
ico-bpsBPS

Gestire la sedazione

ico-flowchart-sedaz-agitFlowchart sedaz/agitaz
ico-rassRASS

Gestire il delirium

ico-flowchart-deliriumFlowchart Delirium
ico-manuale-cam-icuManuale CAM-ICU
ico-schedalavoro-cam-icuScheda di lavoro CAM-ICU
ico-icdscICDSC

 

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