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Measurement of dyspnea: word labeled visual analog scale vs. verbal ordinal scale

Authors :
Robert W. Lansing
Shakeeb H. Moosavi
Robert B. Banzett
Source :
Respiratory physiologyneurobiology. 134(2)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

We previously used a verbal ordinal rating scale to measure dyspnea. That scale was easy for subjects to use and the words provided consistency in ratings. We have recently developed a word labeled visual analog scale (LVAS) with labels placed by the subjects, retaining the advantages of a verbal scale while offering a continuous scale that generates parametric data. In a retrospective meta-analysis of data from 43 subjects, individuals differed little in their placement of words on the 100 mm LVAS (mean+/-S.D. for slight=20+/-2.5 mm, moderate=50+/-5 mm and severe=80+/-6 mm) and ratings were distributed uniformly along the scale. A significant stimulus-response correlation was obtained for both the LVAS (r(2)=0.98) and for the verbal ordinal scale (Spearman r=0.94). The resolution of the two scales differed only slightly. With meaningful verbal anchors, well-defined end-points, and clear instructions about the specific sensation to be rated, both scales provide valid measures of dyspnea.

Details

ISSN :
15699048
Volume :
134
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Respiratory physiologyneurobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....56c118fdc557819de7a4410a22aa38e4