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Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score

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Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score. / Stewart, B.; Lancaster, Gillian; Lawson, J. et al.
In: Archives of Disease in Childhood, Vol. 89, No. 7, 2004, p. 625-630.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Stewart, B, Lancaster, G, Lawson, J, Williams, K & Daly, J 2004, 'Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score', Archives of Disease in Childhood, vol. 89, no. 7, pp. 625-630. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.2003.032599

APA

Stewart, B., Lancaster, G., Lawson, J., Williams, K., & Daly, J. (2004). Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 89(7), 625-630. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.2003.032599

Vancouver

Stewart B, Lancaster G, Lawson J, Williams K, Daly J. Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score. Archives of Disease in Childhood. 2004;89(7):625-630. doi: 10.1136/adc.2003.032599

Author

Stewart, B. ; Lancaster, Gillian ; Lawson, J. et al. / Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score. In: Archives of Disease in Childhood. 2004 ; Vol. 89, No. 7. pp. 625-630.

Bibtex

@article{bf698ae027f1424799b6410211565fbf,
title = "Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score",
abstract = "Aims: To describe the validation and reliability of a new pain tool (the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score, AHTPS) for children at triage in the accident and emergency (A&E) setting.Methods: A new behavioural observational pain tool was developed because of dissatisfaction with available tools and a lack of confidence in self-assessment scores at triage. The study was conducted in a large paediatric A&E department; 575 children (aged 0–16 years) were included. Inter-rater reliability and various aspects of validity were assessed. In addition this tool was compared to the Wong-Baker self-assessment tool.1 The children were concurrently scored by a research nurse and triage nurses to assess inter-rater reliability. Construct validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse{\textquoteright}s triage score with the research nurse reassessment score after intervention and/or analgesia. Known group construct validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse{\textquoteright}s score at triage with the level of pain of the condition as judged by the discharge diagnosis. Predictive validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse{\textquoteright}s AHTPS with the level of analgesia needed by each patient. The AHTPS was also compared to a self-assessment score.Results: A high level of inter-rater reliability, kappa statistic 0.84 (95% CI 0.80 to 0.88), was shown. Construct validity was well demonstrated; known group construct validity and predictive validity were also demonstrated to a varying degree.Conclusions: Results support the use of this observational pain scoring tool in the triage of children in A&E.",
author = "B. Stewart and Gillian Lancaster and J. Lawson and K. Williams and J. Daly",
year = "2004",
doi = "10.1136/adc.2003.032599",
language = "English",
volume = "89",
pages = "625--630",
journal = "Archives of Disease in Childhood",
issn = "1468-2044",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Validation of the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score

AU - Stewart, B.

AU - Lancaster, Gillian

AU - Lawson, J.

AU - Williams, K.

AU - Daly, J.

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Aims: To describe the validation and reliability of a new pain tool (the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score, AHTPS) for children at triage in the accident and emergency (A&E) setting.Methods: A new behavioural observational pain tool was developed because of dissatisfaction with available tools and a lack of confidence in self-assessment scores at triage. The study was conducted in a large paediatric A&E department; 575 children (aged 0–16 years) were included. Inter-rater reliability and various aspects of validity were assessed. In addition this tool was compared to the Wong-Baker self-assessment tool.1 The children were concurrently scored by a research nurse and triage nurses to assess inter-rater reliability. Construct validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse’s triage score with the research nurse reassessment score after intervention and/or analgesia. Known group construct validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse’s score at triage with the level of pain of the condition as judged by the discharge diagnosis. Predictive validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse’s AHTPS with the level of analgesia needed by each patient. The AHTPS was also compared to a self-assessment score.Results: A high level of inter-rater reliability, kappa statistic 0.84 (95% CI 0.80 to 0.88), was shown. Construct validity was well demonstrated; known group construct validity and predictive validity were also demonstrated to a varying degree.Conclusions: Results support the use of this observational pain scoring tool in the triage of children in A&E.

AB - Aims: To describe the validation and reliability of a new pain tool (the Alder Hey Triage Pain Score, AHTPS) for children at triage in the accident and emergency (A&E) setting.Methods: A new behavioural observational pain tool was developed because of dissatisfaction with available tools and a lack of confidence in self-assessment scores at triage. The study was conducted in a large paediatric A&E department; 575 children (aged 0–16 years) were included. Inter-rater reliability and various aspects of validity were assessed. In addition this tool was compared to the Wong-Baker self-assessment tool.1 The children were concurrently scored by a research nurse and triage nurses to assess inter-rater reliability. Construct validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse’s triage score with the research nurse reassessment score after intervention and/or analgesia. Known group construct validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse’s score at triage with the level of pain of the condition as judged by the discharge diagnosis. Predictive validity was assessed by comparing the research nurse’s AHTPS with the level of analgesia needed by each patient. The AHTPS was also compared to a self-assessment score.Results: A high level of inter-rater reliability, kappa statistic 0.84 (95% CI 0.80 to 0.88), was shown. Construct validity was well demonstrated; known group construct validity and predictive validity were also demonstrated to a varying degree.Conclusions: Results support the use of this observational pain scoring tool in the triage of children in A&E.

U2 - 10.1136/adc.2003.032599

DO - 10.1136/adc.2003.032599

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 15210492

VL - 89

SP - 625

EP - 630

JO - Archives of Disease in Childhood

JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood

SN - 1468-2044

IS - 7

ER -