Assessing Chronic Pain Processes Longitudinally: Psychometric Evaluation of the German ‘Assessing Chronic Pain Processes’ (ProCEss) Item Set
Verena E. Hofmann, Julia A. Glombiewski, Wiebke Heider, Saskia ScholtenABSTRACT
Background
Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) is gaining relevance in contemporary pain research. However, EMA questionnaires are rarely psychometrically evaluated, potentially compromising data quality. This study aimed to develop and evaluate a German item set assessing psychological chronic pain processes for use in EMA, focusing on variability and reliability.
Methods
First, the item set was piloted with three people suffering from chronic pain to gather feedback on participant burden and the usability of the data. Second, an evaluation was conducted with a sample of n = 68 individuals with lived experience of chronic pain who completed an EMA protocol with six assessments per day over 12 days (4236 datapoints). Third, revised parts of the item set were preliminarily evaluated in n = 10 people suffering from chronic pain over a 21‐day EMA period with six assessments per day (1253 datapoints). Variability was examined primarily using within‐person standard deviations and response distributions. Reliability was assessed according to current recommendations for single‐item measures (test–retest reliability), two‐item scales (Spearman‐Brown coefficient) and multi‐item scales (McDonald's Omega).
Results
Most items and process scales met the predefined criteria for variability and reliability. However, variance was largely attributable to between‐person differences. Four out of thirteen scales demonstrated insufficient reliability.
Conclusions
This study presents the first psychometrically evaluated German EMA item set capturing a broad range of clinically relevant pain processes. While the findings are promising, further refinement of several scales and additional psychometric evaluation are warranted.
Significance Statement
Psychometrically evaluated German‐language items to assess psychological processes in chronic pain using Ecological Momentary Assessment are currently lacking. This study provides a comprehensive psychometric evaluation of a newly developed item set designed for this purpose. Results indicate generally sufficient reliability and variability, although variance was predominantly attributable to between‐person differences. Overall, the item set represents a promising tool for advancing longitudinal assessments of chronic pain processes.