Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.
Who will be affected?
Readers: No access to all 28 journals. We recommend accessing our articles via PubMed Central
Authors: No access to the submission form or your user account.
Reviewers: No access to your user account. Please download manuscripts you are reviewing for offline reading before Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 7:00 PM.
Editors: No access to your user account to assign reviewers or make decisions.
Copyeditors: No access to user account. Please download manuscripts you are copyediting before Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 7:00 PM.
Swedish Web Version of the Quality of Recovery Scale Adapted for Patients Undergoing Local Anesthesia and Peripheral Nerve Blockade (SwQoR-LA): Prospective Psychometric Evaluation Study
The Swedish Web Version of the Quality of Recovery Scale Adapted for Patients Undergoing Local Anaesthesia and Peripheral Nerve Blockade, SwQoR-LA: Prospective Psychometric Evaluation Study
Ulrica Nilsson;
Karuna Dahlberg;
Maria Jaensson
ABSTRACT
Background:
Frequency and timing of the assessment of patients’ symptoms and discomfort during postoperative recovery is a goal. Therefore, real-time-recovery evaluation has been suggested in order to identify specific deficits in patients’ recovery.
Objective:
To psychometric evaluate the Swedish Web Version of the Quality of Recovery (SwQoR) Scale adapted for patients undergoing local and peripheral nerve block: SwQoR-LA.
Methods:
This was a secondary analysis of a psychometric evaluation of 107 patients aged ≥18 years undergoing day surgery under local or peripheral nerve block anaesthesia at four different day surgery departments in Sweden. The SwQoR-LA, inserted into a mobile application (app) called Recovery Assessment by Phone Points (RAPP), was completed daily on postoperative days 1–7.
Results:
Some evidence of construct validity was supported, and discriminant validity was found in seven of eight items related to general anaesthesia. The internal consistency was acceptable (0.87–0.89) and the split-half reliability was .80– .86. Cohen’s d effect size was 0.98 and the percentage of change from the baseline was 43.4%. No floor or ceiling effects were found.
Conclusions:
The SwQoR-LA is valid, reliable, responsive and clinically feasible for real-time-recovery digital assessment of patient recovery in order to identify specific deficits in patients’ recovery and detect those patients who might benefit from a timely intervention.
Citation
Please cite as:
Nilsson U, Dahlberg K, Jaensson M
Swedish Web Version of the Quality of Recovery Scale Adapted for Patients Undergoing Local Anesthesia and Peripheral Nerve Blockade (SwQoR-LA): Prospective Psychometric Evaluation Study