[Pain assessment using CRIES, FLACC and PIPP in high-risk infants].

Taehan Kanho Hakhoe Chi

Department of Nursing, Inha University, Incheon, Korea.

Published: December 2005

Purpose: Infants at neonatal intensive care units (NICU) are invariably exposed to various procedural and environmental stimuli. The study was performed to compare the pain responses in three NICU stimulants and to examine the clinical feasibility for NICU infants using CRIES, FLACC and PIPP.

Method: In a correlational study, a total of 94 NICU stimulants including angio-catheter insertions, trunk-rubbings and loud noises, was observed for pain responses among 64 infants using CRIES, FLACC and PIPP.

Results: A significant difference was identified among the mean scores in CRIES (F(2, 91)=47.847, p=.000), FLACC (F(2, 91)=41.249, p=.000) and PIPP (F(2, 91)=16.272, p=.000) to three stimulants. In a Post-hoc Scheff test, an angio-catheter insertion showed the highest scores in CRIES, FLACC and PIPP compared to the other two stimulations. A strong correlation was identified between CRIES and FLACC in all three stimulations (.817 < r < .945) while inconsistent findings were identified between PIPP and CRIES or FLACC.

Conclusions: The results of the study support that CRIES and FLACC are reliable and clinically suitable pain measurements for NICU infants. Further studies are needed in data collection time-point as well as clinical feasibility on PIPP administration to assess pain response in infants, including premature infants.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4040/jkan.2005.35.7.1401DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cries flacc
24
cries
8
flacc pipp
8
pain responses
8
nicu stimulants
8
clinical feasibility
8
nicu infants
8
infants cries
8
scores cries
8
flacc
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!