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Chronic pain management a fundamental human right: adaptation and examination of psychometric properties of pain anxiety symptoms scale among osteoporosis sample from Pakistan

Kanwar Hamza Shuja (National Institute of Psychology (NIP), Quaid-I-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan and Department of Psychology, Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan)
Muhammad Aqeel (Department of Psychology, Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan)
Rimsha Sarfaraz (Department of Psychology, Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan)

International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare

ISSN: 2056-4902

Article publication date: 9 November 2020

Issue publication date: 6 February 2021

132

Abstract

Purpose

Chronic pain is a global community health and human rights issue. Proper health care is an important necessity for every human being and access for treatment is every human’s right. Likewise, it is significant that proper instruments should be administered to assess these clinical issues. It is equally necessary to reassess these tools accordingly to diverse cultures, especially subjective tools to check their validity and cultural specification. The purpose of this study is to adapt and examine the factorial structure of 20 items and three-factor structure, pain anxiety symptoms scale (McCracken and Dhingra, 2002). As literature evidence suggested of a three-factor structure (Cho, 2010).

Design/methodology/approach

Primarily, the scale was translated into Urdu language using the forward-backward method. Afterward, a reliability assessment and a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) for construct validity, on an osteoporosis patients’ sample (N = 250) was performed. Subsequently, an Obliman method exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was conducted on an osteoporosis sample (N = 500) for factor structuring followed by validity and reliability analysis.

Findings

The initial findings demonstrated a high internal consistency of the translated version of the scale (α = 0.85) and an acceptable test-retest reliability (r = 0.69). CFA displayed a high inter-correlation between scale and its subscales. However, CFA suggested a three-factor model. Consequently, EFA proposed a three-factor, 19 item scale, namely, behavioral; cognitive; and physical subscale, which demonstrated high alpha reliability (α.= 0.86). Other results indicated the scale to have a significant predictive and convergent validity for depression and positive and negative affect.

Originality/value

The present study is novel in its approach as the present study not only tried to adapt the original Pain Anxiety Symptom Scale to Pakistani culture but has also checked the factorial structure of the original scale. The results achieved in the process suggested a three-factor structure scale with 19 items in opposition to the original four structured, 20 items scale.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Conflict of Interest: There are any conflict of interests between any of the authors.Funding: No source of funding.

Citation

Shuja, K.H., Aqeel, M. and Sarfaraz, R. (2021), "Chronic pain management a fundamental human right: adaptation and examination of psychometric properties of pain anxiety symptoms scale among osteoporosis sample from Pakistan", International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 42-57. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJHRH-07-2020-0057

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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