Assessing physical functioning on pain management programmes: the unique contribution of directly assessed physical performance measures and their relationship to self-reports

Author:

Guildford Beth J1,Jacobs Clair M1,Daly-Eichenhardt Aisling1,Scott Whitney2,McCracken Lance M12

Affiliation:

1. INPUT Pain Management Unit, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK

2. King’s College London, London, UK

Abstract

Physical functioning is a recommended outcome domain for pain management programmes. It can be assessed by self-report and by direct assessment of performance. Although physical performance measures may provide unique and useful information about patient functioning over and above self-report measures, it is not entirely clear which of the many possible performances to assess. This study investigated a battery of three directly assessed physical performance measures and their relationship to three currently used self-report measures of general health and functioning. The three performance measures were sensitive to treatment; patients performed significantly better on all three measures following completion of the pain management programme. The three performance measures were shown to represent a single underlying dimension, and there was a significant degree of overlap between them. The performance measures were shown to be relevant in explaining variation in the self-report measures, as well as to offer a clinically relevant different dimension of assessment to self-report. Future research could focus on developing performance-based measures that capture quality of movement and that are sensitive to relevant processes of therapeutic change.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference38 articles.

1. British Pain Society. Guidelines for pain management programmes for adults. Report, British Pain Society, London, UK, 2013.

2. Core outcome measures for chronic pain clinical trials: IMMPACT recommendations

3. Core outcome domains for chronic pain clinical trials: IMMPACT recommendations

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