• Pain Res Manag · Sep 2008

    Working out the kinks: testing the feasibility of an electronic pain diary for adolescents with arthritis.

    • J N Stinson, G C Petroz, B J Stevens, B M Feldman, D Streiner, P J McGrath, and N Gill.
    • The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada. jennifer.stinson@sickkids.ca
    • Pain Res Manag. 2008 Sep 1;13(5):375-82.

    BackgroundCurrent approaches to evaluating pain in children with chronic arthritis suffer from methodological problems. A real-time data capture approach using electronic diaries has been proposed as a new standard for pain measurement. However, there is limited information available regarding the development and feasibility of this approach in children.ObjectivesThe aim of the present study was to pilot test the e-Ouch electronic pain diary in terms of compliance and acceptability in adolescents with arthritis to further refine the prototype.MethodsA descriptive study design -- with two iterative phases of testing, modifying the prototype and retesting -- was used. A purposive sample of 13 adolescents with mild to severe pain and disability was drawn from a large rheumatology clinic in a university-affiliated pediatric tertiary care centre in Canada over a four-week period in December 2004. Participants were signalled with an alarm to use the diary three times per day for a two-week period. Adolescents completed an electronic diary acceptability questionnaire.ResultsOverall mean compliance rates for phases 1 and 2 were 72.9% and 70.5%, respectively. Compliance was affected by the timing of data collection and technical difficulties. Children rated the diary as highly acceptable and easy to use. Phase 1 testing revealed aspects of the software program that affected compliance, which were subsequently altered and tested in phase 2. No further technical difficulties arose in phase 2 testing.ConclusionsFeasibility testing is a crucial first step in the development of electronic pain measures before use in clinical and research practice.

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