Evaluate construct validity of the Revised American Pain Society Patient Outcome Questionnaire in gynecological postoperative patients using confirmatory factor analysis

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-15-2021

Abstract

Background: The Revised American Pain Society Patient Outcome Questionnaire (APS-POQ-R) evaluates the patient-reported quality of pain management in adults. A validated APS-POQ-R is pivotal to guide effective pain management with better patient satisfaction. Previous studies revealed that subscales of ``patients' perception of pain management'' were unstable cross-culturally. This study aims to evaluate the construct validity of the APS-POQ-R in gynecological postoperative patients with a multi-cultural background using confirmatory factor analysis to allow comparisons among different a priori models at the latent factor level. Methods: Patients aged 18 years old or above and who were scheduled for gynecology surgery were selected. Three different models with a combination of latent factors were based on a priori hypotheses from previous studies. The root-mean-squared error of approximation, comparative fit index, Tucker-Lewis Index, Chi-squared test, and change in Chi-squared statistic given a change in degrees of freedom between models were used to assess the model fit to the present data. Results: A total of 302 patients completed the questionnaire. The five-factor model which was based on Gordon's study has an acceptable fit for the data and was superior when compared to the one-factor baseline model. Although the four-factor model, which originated from Botti's study, also demonstrates a good model fit, the ``perception of care'' construct was excluded in this model. The ``perception of care'' construct is conceptually important as patient-centered care has become the focus of quality improvement of pain service. Conclusions: The APS-POQ-R is easy to administer and is useful for quality evaluation in postoperative pain management. The present study demonstrates that a five-factor structure of the APS-POQ-R is the best fitting model in our patient sample. The results of this study provide further evidence to support the use of APS-POQ-R as a measurement tool for pain management evaluation in acute postoperative patients with a multi-cultural background.

Keywords

Construct validity, Factor analysis, Pain management, Patient management, Postoperative pain

Divisions

anaesthesiology

Funders

Bantuan Penyelidikan Kecil (BKP; Small Research Aid) Grant of the University of Malaya [BK031-2016],International Medical University [BP-I-01/14(38)2017] [BP-I-01/14(40)2017]

Publication Title

BMC Anesthesiology

Volume

21

Issue

1

Publisher

BMC

Publisher Location

CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND

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