Symptom assessment tools used in a hospital-based pain and symptom care program at the University of North Carolina-A novel proxy rating system

2006 
8579 Background: Level of consciousness (LOC) often varies in the palliative care patient population. Tools are needed to reliably rate symptoms. The purpose of our analysis was to describe the patient demographics and rating distributions elicited by two distinct measurement tools, one for those able to self-rate (SR) and one for proxy-rated (PR) patients. Methods: Data obtained prospectively over the time period 1/2002–12/2004 was reviewed. A symptom distress scale using 11 items on a 5 point Likert-type scale (5=most severe) was adapted from the revised McCorkle symptom distress scale and used for alert and oriented patients. Symptoms evaluated included nausea, mood, appetite, shortness of breath (SOB), insomnia, pain, mobility, fatigue, constipation, decreased LOC, and delirium. For patients unable to SR, an advanced practice nurse rated symptoms using the Detroit Medical Center non-verbal pain scale and proxy symptom distress measures adapted from the Common Toxicity Criteria Manual, version 2. Rated...
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