Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center

Savan Shah,1,2 Alexandra C Ho,1,2 Bianca M Kuehler,1 Susan R Childs,1 Glyn Towlerton,1 Ian D Goodall,1 Carsten Bantel1,2 1Pain Medicine, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, 2Section of Anaesthetics, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, L...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shah S, Ho AC, Kuehler BM, Childs SR, Towlerton G, Goodall ID, Bantel C
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2015-08-01
Series:Journal of Pain Research
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/different-measures-different-outcomes-survey-into-the-effectiveness-of-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
id doaj-442aaa374acf4f999831971b81ff1663
record_format Article
spelling doaj-442aaa374acf4f999831971b81ff16632020-11-24T22:53:49ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Pain Research1178-70902015-08-012015default47748622972Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral centerShah SHo ACKuehler BMChilds SRTowlerton GGoodall IDBantel CSavan Shah,1,2 Alexandra C Ho,1,2 Bianca M Kuehler,1 Susan R Childs,1 Glyn Towlerton,1 Ian D Goodall,1 Carsten Bantel1,2 1Pain Medicine, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, 2Section of Anaesthetics, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK Background: Chronic pain clinics aim to improve challenging conditions, and although numerous studies have evaluated specific aspects of therapies and outcomes in this context, data concerning service impact on outcome measures in a general pain population are sparse. In addition, current trends in commissioning increasingly warrant services to provide evidence for their effectiveness. While a plethora of outcome measures, such as pain-intensity or improvement scores, exist for this purpose, it remains surprisingly unclear which one to use. It also remains uncertain what variables predict treatment success. Objectives: This cross-sectional study was conducted to evaluate clinic performance employing different tools (pain scores, pain categories, responder analysis, subjective improvement, satisfaction), and to determine predictors of outcome measures. Patients and methods: Patients attending scheduled clinic follow-up appointments were approached. They were asked to complete the modified short-form Brief Pain Inventory (BPI-SF) that also included assessments for satisfaction and subjective improvement. Comparisons were made with BPI-SF responses that were completed by each patient on admission. Nonparametric tests were employed to evaluate service impact and to determine predictors for outcome. Results: Data of 118 patients were analyzed. There was considerable variation in impact of pain clinics depending on the outcome measure employed. While median pain scores did not differ between admission and follow-up, scores improved individually in 30% of cases, such that more patients had mild pain on follow-up than on admission (relative risk 2.7). Furthermore, while only 41% reported at least moderate subjective improvement after admission to the service, the majority (83%) were satisfied with the service. Positive treatment responses were predicted by “number of painful regions” and “changes in mood”, whereas subjective improvement was predicted by “helpfulness of treatments”. Conclusion: Depending on the outcome measure employed, pain clinics showed varying degrees of impact on patients’ pain experiences. This calls into question the current practice of using nonstandardized outcome reporting for evaluation of service performances. Keywords: Brief Pain Inventory, chronic pain clinics, pain-intensity scores, patient satisfaction, responder analysis, subjective improvementhttp://www.dovepress.com/different-measures-different-outcomes-survey-into-the-effectiveness-of-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shah S
Ho AC
Kuehler BM
Childs SR
Towlerton G
Goodall ID
Bantel C
spellingShingle Shah S
Ho AC
Kuehler BM
Childs SR
Towlerton G
Goodall ID
Bantel C
Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center
Journal of Pain Research
author_facet Shah S
Ho AC
Kuehler BM
Childs SR
Towlerton G
Goodall ID
Bantel C
author_sort Shah S
title Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center
title_short Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center
title_full Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center
title_fullStr Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center
title_full_unstemmed Different measures, different outcomes? Survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a London tertiary referral center
title_sort different measures, different outcomes? survey into the effectiveness of chronic pain clinics in a london tertiary referral center
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Journal of Pain Research
issn 1178-7090
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Savan Shah,1,2 Alexandra C Ho,1,2 Bianca M Kuehler,1 Susan R Childs,1 Glyn Towlerton,1 Ian D Goodall,1 Carsten Bantel1,2 1Pain Medicine, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, 2Section of Anaesthetics, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK Background: Chronic pain clinics aim to improve challenging conditions, and although numerous studies have evaluated specific aspects of therapies and outcomes in this context, data concerning service impact on outcome measures in a general pain population are sparse. In addition, current trends in commissioning increasingly warrant services to provide evidence for their effectiveness. While a plethora of outcome measures, such as pain-intensity or improvement scores, exist for this purpose, it remains surprisingly unclear which one to use. It also remains uncertain what variables predict treatment success. Objectives: This cross-sectional study was conducted to evaluate clinic performance employing different tools (pain scores, pain categories, responder analysis, subjective improvement, satisfaction), and to determine predictors of outcome measures. Patients and methods: Patients attending scheduled clinic follow-up appointments were approached. They were asked to complete the modified short-form Brief Pain Inventory (BPI-SF) that also included assessments for satisfaction and subjective improvement. Comparisons were made with BPI-SF responses that were completed by each patient on admission. Nonparametric tests were employed to evaluate service impact and to determine predictors for outcome. Results: Data of 118 patients were analyzed. There was considerable variation in impact of pain clinics depending on the outcome measure employed. While median pain scores did not differ between admission and follow-up, scores improved individually in 30% of cases, such that more patients had mild pain on follow-up than on admission (relative risk 2.7). Furthermore, while only 41% reported at least moderate subjective improvement after admission to the service, the majority (83%) were satisfied with the service. Positive treatment responses were predicted by “number of painful regions” and “changes in mood”, whereas subjective improvement was predicted by “helpfulness of treatments”. Conclusion: Depending on the outcome measure employed, pain clinics showed varying degrees of impact on patients’ pain experiences. This calls into question the current practice of using nonstandardized outcome reporting for evaluation of service performances. Keywords: Brief Pain Inventory, chronic pain clinics, pain-intensity scores, patient satisfaction, responder analysis, subjective improvement
url http://www.dovepress.com/different-measures-different-outcomes-survey-into-the-effectiveness-of-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
work_keys_str_mv AT shahs differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
AT hoac differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
AT kuehlerbm differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
AT childssr differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
AT towlertong differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
AT goodallid differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
AT bantelc differentmeasuresdifferentoutcomessurveyintotheeffectivenessofchronicpainclinicsinalondontertiaryreferralcenter
_version_ 1725661630931402752