» Articles » PMID: 14736583

A Randomized Trial of Electronic Versus Paper Pain Diaries in Children: Impact on Compliance, Accuracy, and Acceptability

Overview
Journal Pain
Specialties Neurology
Psychiatry
Date 2004 Jan 23
PMID 14736583
Citations 112
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Electronic diary assessment of pain and disability has become increasingly popular in adult chronic pain research but use of this methodology with children has received limited attention. The aim of this study was to compare two formats of a prospective daily diary (handheld computer=e-diary; paper diary=p-diary) on children's compliance, accuracy, and acceptability ratings. Sixty children, ages 8-16 (M=12.3) with headaches or juvenile idiopathic arthritis, were randomized to receive either e-diaries administered via home visits (n=30) or p-diaries (n=30) handed out during clinic visits for return by mail. Results demonstrated significant mean differences in diary entries completed between groups, with children with e-diaries completing more days (M=6.6) compared to children with p-diaries (M=3.8), P<0.001. Diaries returned by children in the p-diary group contained significantly more errors and omissions compared to diaries returned by children in the e-diary group (which contained none), P<0.001. Children rated both diary formats as highly acceptable and easy to use. A significant gender x diary format interaction (P<0.01) was found for compliance where boys demonstrated greater compliance with the e-diary format. Findings demonstrated that the e-diary was feasible to use with children and showed significantly greater compliance and accuracy in diary recording compared to traditional paper diaries in a population of children with recurrent pain.

Citing Articles

High precision in epileptic seizure self-reporting with an app diary.

Zabler N, Swinnen L, Biondi A, Novitskaya Y, Schutz E, Epitashvili N Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):15823.

PMID: 38982283 PMC: 11233562. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-66932-y.


High-impact chronic pain in sickle cell disease: insights from the Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study (PiSCES).

Jagtiani A, Chou E, Gillespie S, Liu K, Krishnamurti L, McClish D Pain. 2024; 165(10):2364-2369.

PMID: 38787626 PMC: 11404329. DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003262.


Definition and Assessment of Paediatric Breakthrough Pain: A Qualitative Interview Study.

Dawson E, Greenfield K, Carter B, Bailey S, Anderson A, Rajapakse D Children (Basel). 2024; 11(4).

PMID: 38671702 PMC: 11049523. DOI: 10.3390/children11040485.


The Sensitivity to Pain Traumatization Scale-Child Version (SPTS-C): Development and preliminary validation.

Pavlova M, Beveridge J, Soltani S, Maunder L, Salomons T, Katz J Can J Pain. 2024; 8(1):2298769.

PMID: 38486938 PMC: 10939150. DOI: 10.1080/24740527.2023.2298769.


Updated recommendations on measures for clinical trials in pediatric chronic pain: a multiphase approach from the Core Outcomes in Pediatric Persistent Pain (Core-OPPP) Workgroup.

Palermo T, Li R, Birnie K, Crombez G, Eccleston C, Kashikar-Zuck S Pain. 2023; 165(5):1086-1100.

PMID: 38112633 PMC: 11017748. DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003105.