Abstract

Thirst discomfort is common because patients are required to undergo long periods of fasting before medical and surgical procedures. The aim of this study was to examine the validity and reliability of the peri-operative thirst discomfort scale (PTDS) for measuring thirst discomfort before procedures. Fasting patients who were scheduled for an elective cardiac or interventional radiology procedure were included in a prospective observational study. Mokken scaling analysis was used to investigate the dimensionality and hierarchical nature of the PTDS. PTDS scores were compared with fasting duration to evaluate construct validity. Convergent validity was evaluated by comparing the PTDS with global thirst discomfort and thirst intensity ratings. Five items from the peri-operative thirst discomfort scale (PTDS-5) formed a Mokken scale with evidence of invariant item ordering. Participants most easily endorsed the item related to the desire to drink water through to first endorsing symptoms related to dryness of the mouth and lips before those related to the abnormal sensations of “thick” saliva and “thick” tongue. Scale reliability was adequate (rho = 0.84). There was a positive correlation between PTDS-5 scores and the global thirst discomfort rating (tau = 0.54; 95% CI = 0.43 to 0.63), as well as thirst intensity (tau = 0.49; 95% CI = 0.38 to 0.59). Duration of fasting was not associated with PTDS-5 scores. The items in the PTDS-5 form a strong Mokken scale, meaning it is a reliable and precise way to order patients according to their thirst discomfort.

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