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Assessment of comatose patients: a Portuguese instrument based on the coma recovery scale and using nursing standard terminology

Assessment of comatose patients: a Portuguese instrument based on the coma recovery scale and using nursing standard terminology
Assessment of comatose patients: a Portuguese instrument based on the coma recovery scale and using nursing standard terminology
Aims: to translate and adapt the Coma Recovery Scale – Revised to Portuguese using the ICNP® (International Classification of Nursing Practice) terminology and to determine if it can be administered reliably across examiners.

Background: assessment tools for the person in a coma can contribute to the planning, implementation and evaluation of care. It also strengthens the autonomy and responsibility of nurses, contributing to the safety, quality and satisfaction of those who deliver and receive care. This allows the sharing of information amongst healthcare professionals and supports decision-making within a multidisciplinary team.

Methods: a convenience sample of 20 patients admitted to an intensive care unit constituted the study participants. The data were collected during 2009. The instrument was administered by the same two raters in all the patients on two consecutive days. The total and subscale score agreement was then examined, using inter-rater and test–retest analyses. The intercorrelation dependencies between the subscales were also analysed.

Results: the results of the analyses suggest that the instrument can be used reliably, even when there are some patient fluctuations. The correlation of the subscale scores was high and better than the results presented for the original Coma Recovery Scale – Revised, indicating that this scale is a homogeneous measure of neurobehavioural function.

Conclusion: the new instrument can be administered reliably by trained examiners and produces a high degree of reproducibility in scores between raters over repeated assessments. We believe that assessment tools that can assess the communication ability of patients will be relevant to evaluating the continuity of care, and promote the effectiveness of care
0309-2402
Simoes, Joao F.F.L.
e1200023-5b3e-4bfc-a93e-fb2d6f5420d2
Jesus, Luis M.T.
7a88fbdb-5bf9-4874-b58d-d8f5a743bb97
Voegeli, David
e6f5d112-55b0-40c1-a6ad-8929a2d84a10
Sa-Couto, Pedro
c03d714f-210c-42b6-811f-9f8e2fc23c0c
Fernades, Julia
a2f2bba1-6358-4569-870e-8f583f641154
Morgado, Marilia
0544663a-60ed-40d8-83b1-467fe7aec080
Simoes, Joao F.F.L.
e1200023-5b3e-4bfc-a93e-fb2d6f5420d2
Jesus, Luis M.T.
7a88fbdb-5bf9-4874-b58d-d8f5a743bb97
Voegeli, David
e6f5d112-55b0-40c1-a6ad-8929a2d84a10
Sa-Couto, Pedro
c03d714f-210c-42b6-811f-9f8e2fc23c0c
Fernades, Julia
a2f2bba1-6358-4569-870e-8f583f641154
Morgado, Marilia
0544663a-60ed-40d8-83b1-467fe7aec080

Simoes, Joao F.F.L., Jesus, Luis M.T., Voegeli, David, Sa-Couto, Pedro, Fernades, Julia and Morgado, Marilia (2011) Assessment of comatose patients: a Portuguese instrument based on the coma recovery scale and using nursing standard terminology. Journal of Advanced Nursing. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2648.2010.05559.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims: to translate and adapt the Coma Recovery Scale – Revised to Portuguese using the ICNP® (International Classification of Nursing Practice) terminology and to determine if it can be administered reliably across examiners.

Background: assessment tools for the person in a coma can contribute to the planning, implementation and evaluation of care. It also strengthens the autonomy and responsibility of nurses, contributing to the safety, quality and satisfaction of those who deliver and receive care. This allows the sharing of information amongst healthcare professionals and supports decision-making within a multidisciplinary team.

Methods: a convenience sample of 20 patients admitted to an intensive care unit constituted the study participants. The data were collected during 2009. The instrument was administered by the same two raters in all the patients on two consecutive days. The total and subscale score agreement was then examined, using inter-rater and test–retest analyses. The intercorrelation dependencies between the subscales were also analysed.

Results: the results of the analyses suggest that the instrument can be used reliably, even when there are some patient fluctuations. The correlation of the subscale scores was high and better than the results presented for the original Coma Recovery Scale – Revised, indicating that this scale is a homogeneous measure of neurobehavioural function.

Conclusion: the new instrument can be administered reliably by trained examiners and produces a high degree of reproducibility in scores between raters over repeated assessments. We believe that assessment tools that can assess the communication ability of patients will be relevant to evaluating the continuity of care, and promote the effectiveness of care

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Published date: 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 176839
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/176839
ISSN: 0309-2402
PURE UUID: d7d46317-6152-48c4-a14e-2b53e64ebb7b
ORCID for David Voegeli: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3457-7177

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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2011 14:19
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:41

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Contributors

Author: Joao F.F.L. Simoes
Author: Luis M.T. Jesus
Author: David Voegeli ORCID iD
Author: Pedro Sa-Couto
Author: Julia Fernades
Author: Marilia Morgado

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