Abstract

Pediatric primary chronic pain disorders come with diagnostic uncertainty, which may obscure diagnostic expectations for referring providers and the decision to accept or re-direct patients into interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs based on diagnostic completeness. We aimed to attain expert consensus on diagnostic expectations for patients who are referred to interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs with six common primary chronic pain diagnoses. We conducted a modified Delphi study with pediatric chronic pain physicians, nurse practitioners and clinical nurse specialists to determine degree of importance on significant clinical indicators and diagnostic items relevant to each of the six primary chronic pain diagnoses. Items were identified through point of care databases and complimentary literature and were rated by participants on a 5-point Likert scale. Our consensus threshold was set at 70%. Amongst 22 experts across 14 interdisciplinary programs in round one and 16 experts across 12 interdisciplinary programs in round two, consensus was reached on 84% of diagnostic items, where the highest degree of agreement was with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS), Type 1 (100%) and the lowest with chronic pelvic pain (67%). This study demonstrated a general agreement amongst pediatric chronic pain experts regarding diagnostic expectations of patients referred to interdisciplinary chronic pain programs with primary chronic pain diagnoses. Study findings may help to clarify referral expectations and the decision to accept or re-direct patients into such programs based on diagnostic completeness while reducing the occurrence of unnecessary diagnostic tests and subsequent delays in accessing specialized care.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call