2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.spinee.2017.07.172
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Measuring participation in patients with chronic back pain—the 5-Item Pain Disability Index

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Cited by 12 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The ODI is the most frequently used assessment tool to evaluate the dysfunction of patients with lumbar back pain in rehabilitation medicine, spine surgery department, and other fields; the higher the ODI score, the more serious the dysfunction [ 10 ]. Our results indicated a positive correlation ( r = 0.574, P < 0.001) between the ODI score and the frequency of neck, shoulder, and lumbar back pain (points 1–5), similar with prior research [ 14 16 ]. These findings suggested that the higher the frequency of chronic lumbar back pain occurring within the same period, the longer the duration of pain, and the higher the ODI score.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…The ODI is the most frequently used assessment tool to evaluate the dysfunction of patients with lumbar back pain in rehabilitation medicine, spine surgery department, and other fields; the higher the ODI score, the more serious the dysfunction [ 10 ]. Our results indicated a positive correlation ( r = 0.574, P < 0.001) between the ODI score and the frequency of neck, shoulder, and lumbar back pain (points 1–5), similar with prior research [ 14 16 ]. These findings suggested that the higher the frequency of chronic lumbar back pain occurring within the same period, the longer the duration of pain, and the higher the ODI score.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Pain-related disability: Pain-related disability was measured using five items from the Pain Disability Index (PDI). The PDI, which is a widely-used and validated to measure pain-related disability [26], and the five items included measured patients' disability related to family/ home responsibilities, recreation, social activity, occupation, sexual behaviour (the PDI items related to self-care and life-support activities were excluded, as used in previous studies [27]. For each category, patients rated their typical level of disability due to pain on a 0-10 NRS, with 0 indicating no disability and 10 indicating maximum disability.…”
Section: Patient Assessmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…McKillop et al (2017) studied the validity of a modified PDI questionnaire (devoid of the last two items) in a group of patients with chronic BP. The results showed that this simple and short measuring tool can be used in clinical practice and research [68].…”
Section: Brief Pain Inventory and Brief Pain Inventory Short Form (Bp...mentioning
confidence: 92%