Inadequate pain assessment is a barrier to appropriate pain management, but single-item “pain screening” provides limited information about chronic pain. Multidimensional pain measures such as the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) are widely used in pain specialty and research settings, but are impractical for primary care. A brief and straightforward multidimensional pain measure could potentially improve initial assessment and follow-up of chronic pain in primary care. To develop an ultra-brief pain measure derived from the BPI. Development of a shortened three-item pain measure and initial assessment of its reliability, validity, and responsiveness. We used data from 1) a longitudinal study of 500 primary care patients with chronic pain and 2) ...
Editor’s key points † The first step in successful pain management is a comprehensive biopsychosocia...
Background An estimated 20% of patients with non-cancer pain symptoms or pain-related diagnoses rec...
CONTEXT: Either a two-factor representation (pain intensity and interference) or a three-factor repr...
Inadequate pain assessment is a barrier to appropriate pain management, but single-item “pain screen...
to appropriate pain management, but single-item “pain screening ” provides limited information about...
Inadequate pain assessment is a significant problem and a key barrier to appropriate pain management...
Valid and reliable assessment of pain is essential for both clinical trials and effective pain manag...
PURPOSE: To compare the sensitivity to change and the responsiveness to intervention of the PROMIS P...
OBJECTIVES: A two-phase study was conducted to refine a version of Cleeland\u27s Brief Pain Inventor...
This research develops and evaluates a simple method of grading the severity of chronic pain for use...
OBJECTIVES: A two-phase study was conducted to refine a version of Cleeland's Brief Pain Inventory (...
Pain assessment remains a challenge to medical professionals and received much attention over the pa...
Andrew J Cook,1 David A Roberts,2 Karen C Nelson,3 Brian R Clark,4 B Eugene Parker Jr4 1Department o...
Background: The United States is experiencing an epidemic of opiate overdoses. Primary care provider...
Background: Pain is one of the most common symptom reported in general practice. For this purpose, o...
Editor’s key points † The first step in successful pain management is a comprehensive biopsychosocia...
Background An estimated 20% of patients with non-cancer pain symptoms or pain-related diagnoses rec...
CONTEXT: Either a two-factor representation (pain intensity and interference) or a three-factor repr...
Inadequate pain assessment is a barrier to appropriate pain management, but single-item “pain screen...
to appropriate pain management, but single-item “pain screening ” provides limited information about...
Inadequate pain assessment is a significant problem and a key barrier to appropriate pain management...
Valid and reliable assessment of pain is essential for both clinical trials and effective pain manag...
PURPOSE: To compare the sensitivity to change and the responsiveness to intervention of the PROMIS P...
OBJECTIVES: A two-phase study was conducted to refine a version of Cleeland\u27s Brief Pain Inventor...
This research develops and evaluates a simple method of grading the severity of chronic pain for use...
OBJECTIVES: A two-phase study was conducted to refine a version of Cleeland's Brief Pain Inventory (...
Pain assessment remains a challenge to medical professionals and received much attention over the pa...
Andrew J Cook,1 David A Roberts,2 Karen C Nelson,3 Brian R Clark,4 B Eugene Parker Jr4 1Department o...
Background: The United States is experiencing an epidemic of opiate overdoses. Primary care provider...
Background: Pain is one of the most common symptom reported in general practice. For this purpose, o...
Editor’s key points † The first step in successful pain management is a comprehensive biopsychosocia...
Background An estimated 20% of patients with non-cancer pain symptoms or pain-related diagnoses rec...
CONTEXT: Either a two-factor representation (pain intensity and interference) or a three-factor repr...