Validation of the Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool in Adult Patients

Author:

Gélinas Céline1,Fillion Lise1,Puntillo Kathleen A.1,Viens Chantal1,Fortier Martine1

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec (cg), Faculty of Nursing, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec (lf, cv, mf), and Department of Physiological Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, Calif (kp).

Abstract

• Background Little research has been conducted to validate pain assessment tools in critical care, especially for patients who cannot communicate verbally. • Objective To validate the Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool. • Methods A total of 105 cardiac surgery patients in the intensive care unit, recruited in a cardiology health center in Quebec, Canada, participated in the study. Following surgery, 33 of the 105 were evaluated while unconscious and intubated and 99 while conscious and intubated; all 105 were evaluated after extubation. For each of the 3 testing periods, patients were evaluated by using the Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool at rest, during a nociceptive procedure (positioning), and 20 minutes after the procedure, for a total of 9 assessments. Each patient’s self-report of pain was obtained while the patient was conscious and intubated and after extubation. • Results The reliability and validity of the Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool were acceptable. Interrater reliability was supported by moderate to high weighted κ coefficients. For criterion validity, significant associations were found between the patients’ self-reports of pain and the scores on the Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool. Discriminant validity was supported by higher scores during positioning (a nociceptive procedure) versus at rest. • Conclusions The Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool showed that no matter their level of consciousness, critically ill adult patients react to a noxious stimulus by expressing different behaviors that may be associated with pain. Therefore, the tool could be used to assess the effect of various measures for the management of pain.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care,General Medicine

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