Background:
Measuring the quality of a patient’s recovery is vital, and reliable patient-centered outcome metrics are needed for clinical investigations and quality improvement. Currently, assessment tools to measure quality of recovery in pediatric patients are lacking. This study aimed to develop a scale to assess the quality of recovery construct in pediatric patients.
Methods:
Using a mixed-methods investigative model, item generation was achieved using two complementary approaches. First, a comprehensive review of the literature identified tools and questions that assessed the endpoints relevant to recovery in children. Questions were categorized and then assessed by an expert Delphi panel who determined the most significant domains and items to be included. Concurrently, semistructured interviews were conducted with patients and their families to identify themes related to recovery that were important to patients and families. The resulting pilot questionnaire was administered to patients and their families presenting for elective surgery in the United States and Australia.
Results:
The literature search identified 41 instruments, comprising 216 questions relevant to recovery. After the initial Delphi round, the item list was reduced to 91 questions, and then to 50 questions after the second round. The themes identified in the semistructured interviews aligned with domains considered important by a panel of experts. A 50-item questionnaire was administered to 1,162 children at multiple timepoints after surgery. Item reduction and factor analysis resulted in the 20-item Pediatric Scale for Quality of Recovery that assesses the domains relevant to physical and psychologic recovery.
Conclusions:
The Pediatric Scale for Quality of Recovery scale is a 20-item questionnaire designed to provide a holistic representation of a child’s physical, emotional, and psychologic recovery after surgery and anesthesia. It was developed and validated with consumer involvement and a strong patient-centered focus. Once further validation has been established, it is expected to become a standardized endpoint in pediatric perioperative trials and quality improvement projects.
Editor’s Perspective
What We Already Know about This Topic
Measuring the quality of a patient’s recovery is vital, and reliable patient-centered outcome metrics are needed for clinical investigations and quality improvement. There are no widely accepted assessment tools to measure quality of recovery in children.
What This Article Tells Us That Is New
This article describes the Pediatric Scale for Quality of Recovery, which was developed and validated with consumer involvement and a strong patient-centered focus. It is a 20-item questionnaire designed to provide a holistic representation of a child’s physical, emotional, and psychologic recovery after surgery and anesthesia.