• Rheumatol. Int. · Sep 2015

    Review

    How is the experience of pain measured in older, community-dwelling people with osteoarthritis? A systematic review of the literature.

    • Katie de Luca, Lynne Parkinson, Henry Pollard, Julie Byles, and Fiona Blyth.
    • Research Centre for Gender Health and Ageing, University of Newcastle, 18 Palm Court South West Rocks, Callaghan, NSW, 2431, Australia, chirokatie@live.com.au.
    • Rheumatol. Int. 2015 Sep 1; 35 (9): 1461-72.

    AbstractThe objective of the study was to perform a systematic review to identify and appraise outcome measures and measures of pain that are used to assess the experience of pain by older people with osteoarthritis, and to assess whether these measures are effective at capturing the multidimensional nature of the experience of this pain. A systematic review of five electronic databases from January 1996 to March 2013 was done. Inclusion criteria were cohort/observational and cross-sectional studies; specific diagnosis of OA; employed outcome measures of pain and/or health and/or quality of life which included questions about pain; and considered older adults. Articles were reviewed for methodological quality using the Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies. A total of 14 publications met the inclusion criteria, and 11 discrete studies were included in the review. The studies used 21 different outcome measures, utilizing 13 measures of pain. Sensory, affective and cognitive dimensions of pain were captured by the measures, albeit studies predominantly measured intensity or severity alone. Measures of pain used in epidemiological studies do not adequately capture the multidimensional nature of the experience of pain in osteoarthritis. There is a fraught complexity in the multidimensionality of the experience of pain in osteoarthritis, and studies exploring osteoarthritis pain in older people should attempt to capture this multidimensionality by employing multiple valid and reliable outcome measures that capture specific dimensions of the pain experience.

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