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. 2016 Mar 12;4:1–10. doi: 10.1007/s40138-016-0089-y

Table 1.

Summary of neonatal pain scales [1]

Pain scale What variables are included? Type of pain Notes
PIPP (premature infant pain profile) Heart rate, oxygen saturation, facial actions Procedural, postoperative Reliable, valid, clinical utility is well established
NIPS (neonatal infant pain score) Facial expression, crying, breathing patterns, arm and leg movements, arousal Procedural Reliable, valid
NFCS (neonatal facial coding system) Facial actions Procedural Reliable, valid, clinical utility is well established, high degree of sensitivity to analgesia
N-PASS (neonatal pain, agitation and sedation scale) Crying, irritability, facial expression, extremity tone, vital signs Procedural, postoperative, mechanically ventilated patients Reliable, valid. Includes sedation end of scale, does not distinguish pain from agitation
CRIES (cry, requires oxygen, increased vital signs, expression, sleeplessness) Crying, facial expression, sleeplessness, requires oxygen to stay at >95 % saturation, increased vital signs Postoperative reliable, valid
COMFORT scale Movement, calmness, facial tension, alertness, respiration rate, muscle tone, heart rate, blood pressure Postoperative, critical care Reliable, valid, clinical utility well established
DAN (Douleur Aiguë du Nouveau-né) Facial expression, limb movements, vocal expression Procedural Reliable, valid