Usefulness of the scales measuring pain, disability
and quality of life
These scales serve to provide valid and reliable
measures of patients' pain intensity, degree of physical disability
and quality of life.
They are useful in determining the intensity of
the ailment within the parameter measured at a given time and in
reliably following its evolution in the patient. Most of these scales
are not useful for comparing the degree of illness among
different patients.
Determining pain intensity, degree of physical
disability and quality of life, reliably and validly, is useful
both in a clinical setting and for research.
In a clinical setting, these scales are
useful for:
- Making a reliable follow-up of a patient's
evolution. It has been shown that the value of each scale
correlates better to the aspect measured (whether it is specifically
pain, disability of quality of life) than any other kind of test,
such as the simple radiograph, Computerized Axial Tomography (CAT
scan), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) or electromyography (EMG).
- Determining the therapeutic objective and priority in each
instance and consequently, choosing the most indicated treatment
strategy. For example, in a patient with very intense pain and
little disability, analgesic treatment should be applied first.
In a patient with little pain and greater disability, physical
rehabilitation should be applied. The priorities can vary over
time according to the patient's evolution.
In a research setting, these scales are indispensable for
any kind of study in which the degree of a patient's illness or
its evolution over time must be determined in a reliable manner.
These studies include, among others:
- Studies on the efficacy or effectiveness of a given treatment.
If the instrument chosen for measuring the symptom's intensity
(for example, pain or disability) is not reliable, the effect
of the evaluated treatment could be jeopardized. Conversely, improvements
over time resulting from a treatment could go undetected if the
measuring instruments are not sufficiently sensitive.
- Studies on risk factors of prognostic aspects. For example,
in order to determine the possible influence of pain intensity,
degree of physical disability or disturbance in the quality of
life on the patient's evolution or his or her risk of suffering
work disability due to back pain, each one of these aspects must
be evaluated in a reliable manner.
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