Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Volume 27, Issue 3 , Pages 226-240, March 2004

Development of a symptom assessment instrument for chronic hemodialysis patients: the dialysis symptom index

Departments of Medicine (S.D.W., L.F.F., R.M.A., M.J.F., D.J.L., G.E.S.), Critical Care Medicine (A.J.R.), and Psychiatry (G.E.S.), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Department of Medicine (L.F.F.), and Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion (M.J.F., G.E.S., L.F.F.), VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System; Center for Bioethics and Health Law (R.M.A.), Institute for Performance Improvement (R.M.A.), University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (R.M.A.), Department of Health Policy and Management (A.J.R.), and Center for Research on Health Care (G.E.S), University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Accepted 14 July 2003.

Abstract 

Little is known about the prevalence, severity, or impact of symptoms in hemodialysis patients because of the lack of a validated symptom assessment instrument. We systematically developed an index to assess physical and emotional symptom burden in this patient population. We employed four steps in the generation of this index: a review of dialysis quality-of-life instruments, three focus groups, experts' content validity assessment, and test–retest reliability measurement. Seventy-five symptoms were identified. Of these, 46 appeared in ≥ 4 of the instruments/focus groups and were considered for inclusion. Twelve were grouped into other symptom constructs and experts judged four of the remaining items not to be pertinent, leaving 30 items in the new index. Overall kappa statistic was 0.48±0.22. These steps allowed the systematic development of a 30-item symptom assessment index for hemodialysis patients. Additional reliability and validity testing is needed prior to its widespread use.

Keywords:  Symptom burden, hemodialysis, scale development

 

PII: S0885-3924(03)00517-7

doi:10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2003.07.004

Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Volume 27, Issue 3 , Pages 226-240, March 2004