The purpose of this study is to pilot test a pain assessment information visualization (InfoViz) tool to facilitate communication about pain severity, location, and quality to increase mutual understanding between patients with limited English proficiency (LEP), interpreters, and providers during pain assessment. 40 participants will be enrolled and can expect to be on study for up to 4 weeks.
The purpose of this study is to pilot test a pain assessment information visualization (InfoViz) tool to facilitate communication about pain severity, location, and quality to increase mutual understanding between patients with limited English proficiency (LEP), interpreters, and providers during pain assessment. The investigators focus on the LEP Hmong because pain is particularly problematic for this group. The Hmong describe pain using visual metaphors that are inconsistent with providers' knowledge and interpreters struggle to translate metaphors accurately between patients and providers. The goals of the study are (1) to examine the feasibility of implementing the pain InfoViz tool, (2) to explore congruency of patient-interpreter-provider triads' mutual understanding (MU) of pain severity, location, and quality, and (3) to evaluate outcome measures selected to capture satisfaction with communication, pain relief, and pain interference with life and explore variables identified in the InfoViz tool conceptual framework (MU of pain assessment information, satisfaction with communication, pain diagnosis and treatment). The investigators will first collect data from 20 participants under the usual care control condition (i.e., interpreters verbally interpreting and communicating pain descriptions), followed by data collection from another 20 participants under the intervention condition (i.e., interpreters using verbal descriptions and the InfoViz tool). The investigators believe that the pain assessment InfoViz tool will increase mutual understanding of pain severity, location, and quality between patients, interpreters, and providers, and consequently lead to increased satisfaction with communication, greater pain relief and reduced pain interference with daily life through better-informed diagnosis and treatment.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
61
The pain InfoViz tool is a two-page paper tool that consists of an explanation of how to use the tool in both Hmong and English, a culturally-appropriate Faces pain severity scale, pain body diagram, and 13 pain qualities in the form of icons representing each pain quality metaphor. The interpreter explains the instructions in Hmong, then marks the body areas corresponding to the location of pain reported by the participant, and marks the pain qualities expressed by the metaphors selected by the Hmong patient. In the clinic appointment, the interpreter communicates to the physician, in English, the pain location and qualities identified by the participant, using the medical terms identified on the InfoViz tool.
Access Community Health Center
Madison, Wisconsin, United States
University of Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin, United States
Percentage of Eligible Patients Enrolled
Feasibility with respect to recruitment will be measured by the percent of eligible patients who enroll.
Time frame: up to 1 day
Proportion of Patients Who Complete the Study
Feasibility with respect to retention will be measured by the proportion of patients who complete the study.
Time frame: up to 4 weeks
Percentage of InfoViz Tools Completely Filled Out
Feasibility with respect to tool use will be measured as the proportion of InfoViz tools with pain severity marked, at least one pain location marked, and at least one pain quality marked on the InfoViz tool.
Time frame: up to 1 day
Percentage of Items Correctly Performed on the Investigator Designed Fidelity Checklist
Feasibility will be in part measured by InfoViz tool fidelity. The percentage of items correctly performed by participants on the investigator-designed fidelity checklist will be reported.
Time frame: up to 1 day
Percentage of Congruency in Mutual Understanding: Patient to Interpreter
One question item from the 6-item Mutual Understanding Scale (MUS) asks participants about their main symptom (i.e., "What was the most important health complaint for which the physician was visited?") and providers to report participants' main symptom (e.g., "What was the most important health complaint for which the patient consulted with you?"). The percentage of congruency between the patient and interpreter response, from 0-100 where 100 is total congruency.
Time frame: up to 1 day
Percentage of Congruency in Mutual Understanding: Interpreter to Provider
One question item from the 6-item Mutual Understanding Scale (MUS) asks participants about their main symptom (i.e., "What was the most important health complaint for which the physician was visited?") and providers to report participants' main symptom (e.g., "What was the most important health complaint for which the patient consulted with you?"). The percentage of congruency between the interpreter and provider, from 0-100 where 100 is total congruency.
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Time frame: up to 1 day
Percentage of Congruency in Mutual Understanding: Patient to Provider
One question item from the 6-item Mutual Understanding Scale (MUS) asks participants about their main symptom (i.e., "What was the most important health complaint for which the physician was visited?") and providers to report participants' main symptom (e.g., "What was the most important health complaint for which the patient consulted with you?"). The percentage of congruency between patient and provider, from 0-100 where 100 is total congruency.
Time frame: up to 1 day
Participant Satisfaction With Communication Answer
Satisfaction with communication will be measured using one item, "Overall, how satisfied are you with your doctor's communication with you about pain?" with response categories of very satisfied, satisfied, neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied. Mean score between 1-5, where 5 indicate higher satisfaction and 1 indicate very dissatisfaction, was calculated across participant groups (i.e., patient, interpreter, provider).
Time frame: up to 1 day
Participant Pain Relief Measured Using a 5 Point Verbal Rating Scale
Participants will be asked to rate the amount of pain relief experienced since the clinic visit using a 5-point Verbal Rating Scale: none, slight, moderate, lots, complete. A mean score between 1-5, where higher scores equal complete pain relief.
Time frame: one time post 4-6 weeks after the clinic vist
Participant Response to Pain Interference Question
One question item derived from the 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey, "During the past 4 weeks, how much did pain interfere with your normal work including both work outside the home and housework?" with response options: "not at all," "a little bit," "moderately," "quite a bit," or "extremely." The number of participants who responded to each condition will be reported. Mean score 1-5, where higher score indicates extreme pain interference, was calculated.
Time frame: usual care participants assessed at baseline and InfoViz participants assessed at 4 weeks
Quality of Communication Answer
Quality of communication will be measured using one item, "Overall, how would you rate this doctor's communication about pain with you? " with response items of excellent, very good, good, fair, or poor. Mean scores of 1 to 5, where higher number indicates excellent quality of communication, was calculated.
Time frame: up to 1 day