Validation of the Wong‐Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale in Pediatric Emergency Department Patients
Abstract
The Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale (WBS), used in children to rate pain severity, has been validated outside the emergency department (ED), mostly for chronic pain. The authors validated the WBS in children presenting to the ED with pain by identifying a corresponding mean value of the visual analog scale (VAS) for each face of the WBS and determined the relationship between the WBS and VAS. The hypothesis was that the pain severity ratings on the WBS would be highly correlated (Spearman's rho > 0.80) with those on a VAS.
This was a prospective, observational study of children ages 8-17 years with pain presenting to a suburban, academic pediatric ED. Children rated their pain severity on a six-item ordinal faces scale (WBS) from none to worst and a 100-mm VAS from least to most. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare mean VAS scores across the six ordinal categories. Spearman's correlation (rho) was used to measure agreement between the continuous and ordinal scales.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.80
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Emergency department
- Visual analogue scale
- Interquartile range
- Post-hoc analysis
- Repeated measures design
- Analysis of variance
- Rating scale
- Quality Education