The Effect of Pain Scale for functional capacity evaluations

Author:

Dornian Shelly1,Short Joel A2,Smith Shannon I3,Townsend Lindsey A3,Morassaei Sara4,Forwell Susan J5

Affiliation:

1. Occupational Therapist, Orion Health Rehabilitation and Assessment Centres, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada

2. Occupational Therapist, Surrey Memorial Hospital, Fraser Health Authority, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada

3. Senior Consultant Occupational Therapist, Progressive Rehab, Orion Health, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

4. Research Manager, Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

5. Department Head and Associate Professor, Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

Introduction The Effect of Pain Scale is a new tool to evaluate the effect of pain on function during functional capacity evaluations. The aim was to test the clinicometric properties of the scale with clinicians familiar with the tool and workers with musculoskeletal injuries. Method The study was conducted in two stages. Stage 1 assessed clinical utility and content validity of the scale using a questionnaire for clinicians using the tool during functional capacity evaluations. In stage 2, data were collected from clients and clinicians during functional capacity evaluations and were used to assess criterion validity, inter-rater reliability, and responsiveness. Results Twelve clinicians responded to the survey on clinical utility and content validity, and data were recorded from 30 clients during their functional capacity evaluations. The tool demonstrated good clinical utility, content validity, inter-rater reliability, and criterion validity, and was responsive to the effects of pain on function as rated by both clients and clinicians. Conclusion Findings show its credibility as a tool with sound clinicometrics and establish its value for functional capacity evaluations with clients who have musculoskeletal injuries. Further testing in other clinical settings and client populations is needed to further establish the clinical value of this tool.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Occupational Therapy

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