Objective: To establish evidence of clinical validity and reliability of the Neonatal Pain, Agitation, and Sedation Scale (N-PASS) in neonates with acute heelstick pain.Study Design: Prospective psychometric evaluation, randomized crossover design. Two nurses administered the N-PASS simultaneously and independently during an actual and sham heelstick done in randomized order. One nurse also administered the Premature Infant Pain Profile (PIPP) concurrently with the N-PASS. Heelsticks were videotaped for repeat analysis.Result: Construct (discriminate) validity was established through the Wilcoxon Signed-ranks test, comparing the distribution of the heelstick and sham N-PASS scores. The mean pain scores were 3.93 (2.30) and 0.81 (1.21) for the heelstick and sham procedures, respectively (Z ¼ À6.429, P<0.0001). Convergent validity was demonstrated by correlation with the PIPP scores (Spearman rank correlation coefficient of 0.75 and 0.72 for raters 1 and 2, respectively). Inter-rater reliability was high, measured by intra-class coefficients; the ICC estimates (95% CI) of the pain scale were 0.86 (0.78, 0.92) and 0.93 (0.88, 0.96) for a single rating and average of two independent ratings, respectively (P<0.0001). Internal consistency, measured by Cronbach's alpha, was evident (0.84 to 0.89). Test-retest reliability was demonstrated by repeat scoring of videotaped heelsticks, measured by Spearman's rho correlation (0.874, P<0.0001).
Conclusion:This research provides beginning evidence that the N-PASS is a valid and reliable tool for assessing acute heelstick pain in infants 0 to 30 days of age, 23 to 40 weeks gestation.
Current warming methods yield wide variation in milk temperature. Nurses' estimation of milk temperature was not consistent with measured temperature at the time of delivery. Future research is needed to establish guidelines for feeding temperature standardization assisting nurses to enhance evidence-based feeding practices.
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