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Health
Psychology PSY408
VU
Lesson
25
ASSESSING
PAIN
To
summarize our previous lecture, the
process by which people perceive pain
involves a complex chain of
physiological
and neuro-chemical events.
These events can be affected
by psychosocial processes, such
as
people's
beliefs about whether a drug will reduce
their discomfort.
Pain
also affects and can be
influenced by people's learning, cognition,
social experiences, and
emotion.
Although
people can indicate through their
behavior that they are feeling pain, the
pain they perceive is
actually
a private and subjective
experience.
How
can researchers and
clinicians who work with
patients who have painful
symptoms assess the level
and
type
of pain these individuals
perceive? We will be answering this
question in this lecture.
Assessing
People's Pain
Researchers
and clinicians have developed a variety
of techniques for assessing
people's pain. Although
virtually
all these methods can be
applied both in research and in treating
pain patients, some techniques
are
used
more often in research,
whereas others are used
mostly to supplement a detailed medical
history in
clinical
practice. In either setting, it is
advisable to use two or more
different measurement techniques
to
enhance
the accuracy of the assessment. We will
organize our discussion of
techniques for
measuring
people's
pain by classifying them into three
groups: self-report methods, behavioral
assessment approaches,
and
psycho-physiological measures.
1.
Self-Report Methods
Perhaps
the most obvious approach to
measuring people's pain is to ask them to
describe their discomfort,
either
in their own words or by
filling out a rating scale
or questionnaire. In treating a patient's pain,
health
care
workers ask where the pain
is, what it feels like, how
strong it is, and when it tends to
occur. With
chronic
pain patients, medical and
psychological professionals often
incorporate this kind of questioning
within
the structure of a clinical
interview.
A.
Interview Methods in Assessing
Pain
To
treat chronic pain effectively, professionals
need more information than
just a description of the pain.
Interviews
with the patient and key
others, such as family
members and coworkers,
provide a rich source
of
background
Information in the early phases of
treatment. These discussions
ordinarily focus on such
issues
as:
·
The history of the pain
problem, including when it started,
how it progressed, and what
approaches have
been
used for controlling
it.
·
The patient's emotional adjustment,
currently and before the pain syndrome
began.
·
The patient's lifestyle--recreational
interests, exercise patterns, diet,
and so on--before the pain
condition
began.
·
The pain syndrome's impact
on the patient's current lifestyle, interpersonal relations,
and work.
·
The social context of pain
episodes, such as happenings in the
family before an attack and
how family
members
respond when the pain
occurs.
·
Factors that seem to trigger
attacks or make them
worse.
·
How the patient typically
tries to cope with the
pain.
The
information obtained in these interviews
can also be supplemented by having the
patient and key
others
fill out
questionnaires.
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B.
Pain Rating
Scales
One
of the most direct, simple, and commonly
used ways to assess pain is to
have individuals rate
some
aspect
of their discomfort on a scale.
This approach is used very
often to measure how strong the pain
is.
Because
rating scales are so easy
and quick to use, people can
rate their pain frequently.
Averaging these
ratings
across time gives a more
accurate picture of the pain the person
generally experiences than
individual
ratings
do. Repeated ratings can
also reveal how the pain
changed over time, such as
during everyday
activities
or during the course of an experiment. One
use of repeated ratings is in showing the
ebbs and
flows
of pain intensity that patients
often experience.
For
instance, one patient's wife believed
that her husband was
experiencing incapacitating and
severe pain
every
waking hour of his life. This
belief contributed to her
preventing him from
participating in any but
the
simplest
chores around the house. Their
social life had deteriorated,
and the couple had grown
increasingly
depressed
over the course of 4 years.
Upon hearing that her
husband experienced only
moderate pain most
of
the time, that he indeed felt
capable of various tasks,
and that he actually
resented his wife's efforts
at
pampering
him, she was helped to alter
her behavior.
Repeated
ratings during each day
may also reveal patterns in
the timing of severe pain. Is the pain
most
severe
in the evening, or on certain days? If
so, are there some
aspects of the environment that
may be
responsible
and perhaps
changeable?
C.
Pain Diaries
Pain
ratings can also be used in
a pain diary, which is a detailed
record of a person's pain experiences.
The
pain
diary a patient keeps would include
pain ratings and information
about the time and circumstances
of
pain
episodes, any medications
taken, and comments about
each episode.
D.
Pain Questionnaires
Pain
is only partly described by the intensity
of the discomfort people feel--the
experience of pain
has
many
qualities and dimensions. Ronald Melzack
began to recognize the multidimensional
nature of pain
through
his interactions with pain patients. He
described in an interview how this
realization emerged from
talks
he had with a woman who
suffered from phantom limb
pain. She would describe
burning pains that
were
like a red- hot poker being
shoved through her toes
and her ankle. She
would cry out from the
pain in
her
legs. Of course, there were
no legs. Well, that made me
realize the utter subjectivity of pain--
no
objective
physical measure is very likely to
capture that.... I began to
write down the words she
used to
describe
her pain. I realized that the
words describing the
emotional-motivational component of her
pain--
"exhausting,
sickening, terrifying, punishing--were
very different from those
for the sensory
component---
shooting,
scalding, splitting, cramping." Later I
came to see there was also
an evaluative component such as
"it's
unbearable" or "it's annoying". I wrote
down the words other
patients used, too, but I
didn't know
what
to do with them.
Melzack
determined that pain involves three broad
dimensions--affective (emotional-motivational),
sensory
and
evaluative--by conducting a study in
which subjects sorted over
100 pain-related words into
separate
groups
of their own making.
Melzack's
research also indicated that
each of the three dimensions
consisted of sub-classes. For
instance,
the
sensory dimension included a sub-class
with the words "hot,"
"burning," scalding' and
"searing"--
words
relating to temperature. Notice that
these four words connote
increasingly hot temperatures,
with
searing
being the hottest. Similarly, the affective dimension included a
subclass of three words relating
to
fear:
"fearful," "frightful," terrifying."
Then, by determining the degree of pain
reflected by each
word,
Melzack
(1975)--a professor at McGill
University--was able to construct an
instrument to measure pain.
This
test is called the McGill
Pain Questionnaire (MPQ).
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2.
Behavioral Assessment
Approaches
Because
people tend to exhibit pain
behaviors when they are in discomfort, it should be
possible to assess
their
pain by observing their behavior. A
person is likely to show
different types and patterns
of behavior if
the
pain is intense as compared to
moderate; if it involves a headache as
opposed to low back pain;
and if
chronic
pain is recurrent than if it is intractable.
Psychologists have developed procedures
for assessing pain
behavior
in two types of situations: in
everyday activities and in structured
clinical sessions.
A.
Assessing Pain Behavior in
Structured Clinical
Sessions
Procedures
are available whereby health
care workers can assess the
pain behavior of patients in
structured
sessions
that are usually conducted
in hospital settings. They are structured
by the specific pain behaviors
to
be
assessed and the tasks the
patient is asked to perform. One
approach of this kind has
been developed
into
a pain assessment instrument-- the UAB
Pain Behavior Scale--for use by
nurses during their
standard
routines,
such as in early morning rounds.
The nurse has the patient
perform several activities
and rates
each
of 10 behaviors, such as the patient's
mobility and use of medication, on a
3-point scale:
"none,"
"occasional,"
and "frequent." These
ratings are converted into
numerical values and summed
for a total
score.
Some
studies using structured clinical
sessions have focused on
assessing discomfort in individuals
suffering
from
low back pain. Each investigation
had patients perform a
standard set of activities. In
one study, for
example,
the people were asked to walk, pick up an
object on the floor, remove their
shoes while sitting,
and
perform several exercises,
such as trunk rotations, toe touching,
and sit-ups. Patients in
each
investigation
were videotaped, and trained assessors
rated their performance for
several pain
behaviors,
such
as guarded movement, rubbing the
pain area, grimacing, and
sighing. These studies have
shown that
pain
behaviors can be assessed
easily and reliably and that
behavioral assessments correlate well
with
patients'
self-ratings of pain.
B.
Assessing Pain Behavior in Everyday
Activities
How
does the pain patient behave
in everyday activities especially at
home? Does the person spend
much
time
in bed, complain of discomfort a lot,
seek help frequently in
moving, or walk with a limp
most of the
time?
How much of these behaviors
do the person exhibit? Behavioral
assessments of everyday activities
like
these can be made.
Family
members or key others in the patient's
life are usually the best
people to make these
everyday
assessments
of pain behavior. These people
must, of course, be willing to
help and be trained to
make
careful
observations and keep
accurate records.
Researcher
Wilbert Fordyce (1976) has
recommended a procedure whereby the
assessor--say, the client's
spouse--compiles
a list of five to ten behaviors
that generally signal when
the patient is in pain. Then the
spouse
is trained to watch for these
behaviors, to keep track of the amount of
time the patient exhibits
them,
and to monitor how people,
including the assessor, react to the
client's pain behavior. This
procedure
is
useful not only in assessing
the patient's pain experiences but in determining
their impact on his or
her
life
and the social context that
may maintain pain
behaviors.
These
supplemental procedures provide
additional data that can be
of value in dealing with
interpersonal
issues
that influence the pain
experience.
3.
Psychophysiological Measures
Another
approach for assessing pain
involves taking measurements of
physiological activity, since pain
has
both
sensory and emotional
components that can produce
changes in bodily functions.
Psychophysiology is
the
study of mental or emotional
processes as reflected by changes they
produce in physiological activity.
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A.
One
psychophysiological measure researchers
have used for assessing pain
uses an apparatus called
an
Electromyograph
(EMG) to
measure the electrical activity in
muscles, which reflects
their tension. The
findings
of various researches suggest
that differences between pain
patients and controls may
exist when
the
subjects' muscles are
active. And headache
patients show different EMG
patterns when they have
headaches
than when they do not.
B.
Researchers
have also attempted to assess
peoples' pain with measures
of autonomic activity, such
as
of
heart rate and skin
conductance.
Although
some measures of autonomic activity
may be useful in assessing the
emotional component of
pain,
they are not likely to be very
useful because changes in autonomic
activity also occur in the
absence of
the
sensation of pain.
C.
The
last psychophysiological measure of pain
we will consider involves the electrical
activity of the
brain, as
measured by an electroencephalograph
(EEG).
When
a person's sensory system
detects a stimulus, such as a clicking
sound from earphones, the
signal to
the
brain produces a change in
EEG voltage. Electrical changes produced
by stimuli are called
evoked
potentials
and show up in EEG
recordings as sharp surges or
peaks in the graph. Pain
stimuli produce
evoked
potentials that vary in magnitude--the
amplitudes of the surges increase
with the intensity of the
stimuli,
decrease when subjects take
analgesics, and correlate
with people's subjective reports of
pain.
Even
though psychophysiological measures
provide objective assessments of bodily
changes that occur in
response
to pain, these changes may
also be affected by other
factors, such as attention, diet,
and stress. In
clinical
situations, measures of muscle tension,
autonomic activity, and evoked potential
are probably best
used
as supplements to self-report and behavioral
assessment approaches.
Assessing
Pain in Children
When
a patient has symptoms that
include pain, the physician usually needs
to know its location,
intensity,
quality,
duration, and temporal patterning. This
information helps in making an accurate
diagnosis.
Although
children's ability to provide this
information is limited, especially if
they are young, researchers
have
developed measures that use self-report,
behavioral, and physiological methods.
Effectively
interviewing
children requires considerable
skill in developing rapport with
them, asking the right
questions
in
ways they can understand,
and knowing what their
answers mean.
What
kinds of self-report methods are
available to assess children's pain? One
approach uses rating scales
to
describe
the intensity of their pain. Another
approach uses questionnaires.
These instruments assess
the
pain
itself and its psychosocial
effects, such as how the
child and family reacted to
the pain. Adults may
help
the
children fill out portions
of the questionnaires when they lack
needed language
skills.
Behavioral
and physiological assessment approaches
also provide valuable ways
to measure children's pain,
especially
in early childhood. The most
obvious behavioral approach simply
involves having the child or
parents
report the child's pain behaviors in pain
diaries. Other behavioral assessments
can use structured
clinical
sessions in which health care
workers rate or record the
occurrence of pain behavior. Methods
for
physiological
assessment are like those we
considered earlier.
Children's
pain experiences are affected by a
variety of psychosocial factors, particularly the
social
environment
in which pain occurs.
Parents serve as models and
agents of reinforcement for the
pain
behavior
of their children. But little is
known about the personality and family
characteristics of children
that
may contribute to the intensity and
frequency of their pain. Most
studies on pain have focused
on adult
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subjects,
not on children, and the studies
conducted with children have
generally produced unclear
results
because
they were often poorly
designed and carried out.
Now that researchers have
methods to assess
children's
pain, they can do the kind of
high-quality research that is
needed.
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