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Patient Reported Outcome Measures

Validation of the Hospital Asthma Severity Score (HASS) in children ages 2–18 years old

, MSN, RN, CCRN, CWOCNORCID Icon, , MD, MMSc, , MA, , MPH, , MD & , PhD, RN, NNP-BC, FAAN
Pages 315-324 | Received 29 Jul 2020, Accepted 13 Nov 2020, Published online: 02 Dec 2020
 

Abstract

Introduction

The Hospital Asthma Severity Score (HASS) was developed to communicate inpatient asthma severity between providers. The purpose of this prospective study was to validate the HASS against the Pediatric Respiratory Assessment Measure (PRAM) and spirometry for assessment of inpatient asthma exacerbation severity in patients 2–18 years old, at a single point-in-time.

Methods

This study was registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02782065). Children admitted to a tertiary care, free-standing children’s hospital were assessed for asthma severity using the HASS, PRAM, and pulmonary function by spirometry. Inter-rater agreement of HASS and PRAM scores was assessed between two blinded clinician raters. Spirometry results were obtained by a certified pulmonary laboratory technician and correlated with HASS and PRAM scores.

Results

The sample included 58 subjects. Allowing for a one-point difference in continuous HASS and PRAM scores, inter-rater agreement was 79% for the HASS and 60% for the PRAM. When the scores were categorized as mild, moderate, and severe, inter-rater agreement was 62% for the HASS and 93% for the PRAM (p < .0001). Additionally, intra-rater agreement between HASS and PRAM severity categories was 71% for Rater 1 and 64% for Rater 2. A weak correlation was noted between both the HASS and FEV1 (r = –0.31; p = 0.11), and PRAM and FEV1 (r = –0.30; p = 0.11) for the 29 subjects with acceptable spirometry results.

Conclusions

The HASS and PRAM have acceptable inter-rater and intra-rater agreement. These results support validation of the HASS for managing hospitalized patients during asthma exacerbations.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the pulmonary function technicians, data collectors, and the patients and families who participated in this study.

Declaration of interest

Inventor of the HASS, Dr. McBride, was a member of the study team. She did not participate in data collection, analysis, or interpretation of findings. Her role was to serve as an expert for review of the protocol prior to study implementation, and development of the manuscript, specifically characterizing the history of the HASS. The remaining authors have no disclosures to report related to this body of work.

Additional information

Funding

This work was funded by Boston Children's Hospital Inquiry Investment Drives Evidence into Action grant (97801) and the Program for Patient Safety and Quality grant (91504).

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