1992
DOI: 10.1016/0885-3924(92)90075-s
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A comparison of the Hopkins Pain Rating Instrument with standard visual analogue and verbal descriptor scales in patients with cancer pain

Abstract: A self-contained, portable, pain rating instrument that provides an immediate result for documentation purposes was developed to improve pain assessment in cancer patients. The Hopkins Pain Rating Instrument (HPRI) is a 5 x 20 cm plastic visual analogue scale (VAS) with a sliding marker that moves within a groove that measures 10 cm. The side facing the patient resembles a traditional VAS while the opposite side is marked in cm to quantify pain intensity. This psychometric study, which employed a descriptive c… Show more

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Cited by 79 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Patients were asked to indicate the intensity of pain by moving an adjustable marker along the scale. Reliability and validity have been demonstrated satisfactorily for VAS pain (Grossman et al, 1992).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Patients were asked to indicate the intensity of pain by moving an adjustable marker along the scale. Reliability and validity have been demonstrated satisfactorily for VAS pain (Grossman et al, 1992).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…The advantage of the VAS is that biases toward preferred values that are found when using categorical or equal-appearing interval scales are avoided [41,42]. Furthermore, the use of VAS produces more objective reproducible and reliable results [43]; VAS is also more sensitive [41,42] than categorical rating scales with or without verbal descriptors [32,44]. However, the disadvantage of VAS is that the obtained numeric values cannot be connected with certain categories or ordered scales, because the data are usually not normally distributed [45,46].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For statistical purposes, the terms were assigned a numerical value from 0 to 5 (0=no pain, 5=worst possible pain). In a study among 71 cancer patients aged 18-85 years with and without pain, the correlation coefficients for test-retest reliability of the VDS was 0.94 (Grossman et al, 1992).…”
Section: Verbal Descriptor Scale (Vds)mentioning
confidence: 99%