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EVENDOL Score proved to be a quick and easy-to-use tool for pain assessment for children Younger in Out-of-Hospital emergency medicine

EVENDOL Score proved to be a quick and easy-to-use tool for pain assessment for children Younger in Out-of-Hospital emergency medicine EVENDOL Score proved to be a quick and easy-to-use tool for pain assessment for children Younger in Out-of-Hospital emergency medicine
EVENDOL Score proved to be a quick and easy-to-use tool for pain assessment for children Younger in Out-of-Hospital emergency medicine EVENDOL Score proved to be a quick and easy-to-use tool for pain assessment for children Younger in Out-of-Hospital emergency medicine

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For effective and easy pain estimation in children (younger than 8 years‘ including newborns or preterm neonates) in out-of-hospital emergency setting, EVENDOL Score can be considered.

In out-of-hospital emergency medicine, pain in children is underestimated and undertreated. A reliable pain scale has not been validated till now in this setting. EVENDOL, is a AA single observational pain scale for all children younger than 8 years which has been validated in emergency pediatric units. The practicality of EVENDOL score in an out-of-hospital emergency setting has been explored in the study portrayed here.

This was an prospective multicenter study which comprised of all conscious children younger than 8 years. They were transported by a mobile intensive care unit between October 2008 and May 2010. The emergency physician and nurse independently estimated the child's pain. They used a numeric rating scale (score 0-10), then the 5-item EVENDOL scale (verbal/vocal expression, facial expression, movements, postures, and relationship with entourage) (score 0-3/item) at 3 time points (at rest, during examination, and after analgesia). The  internal validity, interrater reliability, discriminant ability (influence of fever and anxiety), and face validity of the scale was studied upon.

A total of 422 children participated in this study, out of which 82 and 62 (29%-39%) were in pain according to the emergency physician and nurses (numeric rating scale >3/10). For all population subsets, all EVENDOL scale attributes were fulfilled at all 3 time points. The values for the first estimation (entire study population) obtained were: internal validity (0.78-0.89), interrater reliability (r = 0.63-0.76, weighted κ = 0.49-0.65), construct validity, and discriminant ability (r = 0.6-0.7). No change was observed on the EVENDOL score due to fever. The anxiety level and pain were correlated. A fast (mean, 2.3-3.4 minutes) completion time and a good face validity was observed.

It was thus revealed that EVENDOL is a quick, easy-to-use, discriminant instrument to estimate pain in young children in out-of-hospital emergency settings.

Source:

Pediatr Emerg Care. 2016 Dec 28.

Article:

Pain Assessment in Children Younger Than 8 Years in Out-of-Hospital Emergency Medicine: Reliability and Validity of EVENDOL Score

Authors:

Beltramini A et al.

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