KMID : 0356920160690050492
|
|
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2016 Volume.69 No. 5 p.492 ~ p.505
|
|
Development of the Geop-Pain questionnaire for multidisciplinary assessment of pain sensitivity
|
|
Cho Sung-Hwan
Ko Su-Hwan Lee Mi-Soon Koo Bon-Sung Lee Joon-Ho Kim Sang-Hyun Chae Won-Seok Jin Hee-Cheol Lee Jeong-Seok Kim Yong-Ik
|
|
Abstract
|
|
|
Background: To assess the multidisciplinary aspects of pain, various self-rating questionnaires have been developed, but there have not been sufficient relevant studies on this topic in South Korea. The aim of this study was to develop a new pain sensitivity-related questionnaire in the Korean language that would be simple and would well reflect Koreans' senses.
Methods: A new pain assessment questionnaire was developed through a pre-survey on "geop", which is the Korean word expressing fear, anxiety, or catastrophizing. We named the new assessment questionnaire the Geop-Pain Questionnaire (GPQ). The GPQ was composed of 15 items divided into three categories and rated on a 5-point scale. As a preliminary study, internal consistency and test-retest reliability analyses were conducted. Subsequently, 109 individuals completed the GPQ along with three pain-related questionnaires translated into Korean (Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire [PSQ], Pain Anxiety Symptoms Scale [PASS], and Pain Catastrophizing Scale [PCS]), and the correlations were analyzed.
Results: All items in the GPQ showed appropriate internal consistency, and the test-retest reliability analysis showed no statistically significant differences. The correlations between the GPQ and the existing questionnaires revealed that the GPQ scores had mid-positive correlations with the PSQ scores and strong positive correlations with the PASS and PCS scores.
Conclusions: This study attempted to develop a questionnaire assessing pain sensitivity multidimensionally using the Korean word geop for the first time. The self-rating GPQ showed high correlations with the existing questionnaires and demonstrated potential to be utilized as a pain prediction index in clinical practice.
|
|
KEYWORD
|
|
Anxiety, Catastrophization, Korean language, Multidisciplinary, Surveys and questionnaires
|
|
FullTexts / Linksout information
|
|
|
|
Listed journal information
|
|
|
|