Research Report TM/11/02
June 2011
Pilot study of risks and long-term effects
of carbon monoxide poisoning
Brian Miller, John Ross, Laura MacCalman, Chris Burton and
Claudia Pagliari
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Research Report TM/11/02
June 2011
(Originally submitted Feb 2011)
Copyright © 2011 Institute of Occupational Medicine.
INSTITUTE OF OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE
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Pilot study of risks and long-term effects of carbon
monoxide poisoning
Department of Health Policy Research Programme project – 002/0025
Brian Miller
1
, John Ross
2
, Laura MacCalman
1
, Chris Burton
3
and Claudia
Pagliari
3
1
Institute of Occupational Medicine, Edinburgh
2
University of Aberdeen
3
University of Edinburgh
We report on a pilot study intended to explore methods of investigating health effects
in survivors of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning requiring hospitalisation.
These effects were to be studied via a questionnaire. We established that cases
could be identified in centralised Scottish health record systems, and drew a small
sample, plus a matching sample of appendicitis cases as controls.
Contact with the selected subjects was through records of their registrations with GP
practices. Questionnaires for 134 subjects were sent to GPs, with a request that they
be forwarded to the subjects. There were only a small number of refusals by the
GPs, but response from the subjects was disappointing, leading to only 24 returned
questionnaires (10 cases, 14 controls); a response rate of only 18%.
Examination of data for the selected cases showed that a number had entries
suggesting that their poisoning may have been intentional rather than accidental. It
is therefore possible that estimates of accidental poisonings for study are
overestimates.
Because of the low response rate to the questionnaire survey, we believe that the
results from a full study using these methods could produce results that are not
representative of the whole affected population, and we do not recommend that such
a study be commissioned. We discuss briefly some other possible routes of
investigation.
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CONTENTS
SUMMARY
V
Background
v
Aim
v
Methods
v
Results
v
Conclusions
vi
Policy implications
vi
1
INTRODUCTION
1
1.1
Background
1
1.2
Call for tenders
2
1.3
Initial proposal
2
1.4
Revised proposal for a pilot study
3
1.5
Objectives
4
2
METHODS
5
2.1
Developing a protocol
5
2.2
Ethical approval and permissions
5
2.3
Development of questionnaire
5
2.4
Additional documents
6
2.5
Hospital records
7
2.6
Selecting and contacting subjects
7
2.7
Data processing
8
2.8
Analysis of returns
9
3
RESULTS
11
3.1
Response
11
3.2
Mortality data
11
3.3
Data summary
14
3.4
Available pool of cases and controls
16
3.5
Prediction of likely response
19
4
DISCUSSION
21
4.1
Objectives and achievement
21
4.2
Possibilities for further work
22
4.3
Policy implications
23
5
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
25
6
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
27
7
REFERENCES
29
APPENDIX 1: STUDY PROTOCOL
31
APPENDIX 2: PERMISSIONS AND APPROVALS
33
APPENDIX 3: QUESTIONNAIRES
35
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APPENDIX 4: SURVEY LETTERS AND DOCUMENTS
37
APPENDIX 5: TABULATIONS OF QUESTIONNAIRE RESPONSES
39
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SUMMARY
BACKGROUND
There are a number of cases each year of fatal and non-fatal carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning.
In non-fatal cases, immediate consequences can include loss of consciousness and irreversible
tissue damage in the brain or heart. Poisoning insufficient to cause coma may still lead to
symptoms, but the cause may not be recognised, and it is likely that mild CO poisoning is
under-reported.
Symptoms of poisoning may in some cases persist for indefinite periods, but a diffuse pattern of
persistent symptoms is also suggestive of a somatoform disorder exacerbating awareness of
symptoms. This may have implications for the clinical management of some cases following
CO poisoning, as in other cases of medically unexplained symptoms with possibly cognitive
and psychological roots.
AIM
This study was based on an intention to examine by questionnaire the general physical,
cognitive and mental health status of subjects who had experienced CO poisoning severe
enough to be hospitalised. The aim was to take advantage of the centralised system of hospital
records maintained for all Scottish hospitals to identify subjects, and use standard systems to
forward questionnaires through the patients’ current GP practices. As matched controls,
patients who had been hospitalised for appendicitis were to be selected. The present report
concerns a pilot study to develop and test the methods, and to recommend whether and/or how
to carry out a full study using these methods.
METHODS
The procedures identified as necessary involved three different agencies within the Scottish
health and records systems: Information Services Division (ISD) of the NHS would identify
hospitalised cases of accidental CO poisoning from a large A&E department in the Lothians; the
General Registrar’s Office for Scotland would identify in the National Health Service Central
Register cases since deceased, so that contact would not be attempted for them; and NHS
Practitioner Services Department (PSD) would identify the remaining patients’ current GP
registrations, so that letters could be forwarded through the GPs.
The necessary permissions and approvals were obtained and 134 questionnaire packs were sent
to GP practices for forwarding; a second phase sent reminder packs for 108 of these subjects.
RESULTS
Disappointingly, completed questionnaires were received for only 10 cases and 14 controls. All
the data from these returns are summarised within this report. Because of the small numbers, no
formal statistical analyses were carried out, and it cannot be assumed that differences observed
generalise to wider populations.
Examination of the causes of death supplied for the deceased showed a surprisingly high
proportion of suicides. However, examination of the detailed records from the ISD’s data files
showed that, although the selection procedure had eliminated from consideration any patients
where the primary diagnosis code indicated self-harm, a sizeable number of cases had such
indications in their secondary diagnosis codes. This implies that our sample of cases was not
drawn solely from accidental poisonings, but included also intentional ones; and, in turn, that
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any future work based on this computer database may need to take secondary diagnosis codes
into account.
CONCLUSIONS
We judge that the very low response rate achieved by the questionnaire introduces a strong
possibility that a full study using these methods could be unrepresentative, and could suffer
from response bias. We therefore do not recommend that such a study be commissioned.
We discuss briefly some other ways in which the relationship between CO poisoning and
subsequent health effects might be investigated.
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
The present study was a pilot study and was not expected to produce a data set that might
inform policy. It is our judgment that if a full study were carried out in England and
experienced similarly high rates of non-response, its results would not be reliable or
representative.
Current efforts in England to interrogate centrally held records on carbon monoxide poisonings
may need to note the necessity to use all relevant diagnostic codes, to avoid counting self-harm
as accidents.
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1 INTRODUCTION
1.1
BACKGROUND
Acute carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning acts by gradually reducing the supply of oxygen carried
to tissue by the blood, through the formation of carboxyhaemoglobin. The body adapts by
increasing cardiac output, pumping more blood to compensate for its reduced oxygen content.
As the maximum cardiac output is reached, and as the myoglobin within the heart muscle is
poisoned, decompensation occurs with a catastrophic fall in cardiac output and loss of
consciousness. This may cause damage to the brain, heart or other tissues; additionally a
secondary cerebral reperfusion injury may occur after rescue and re-oxygenation.
Loss of consciousness during acute poisoning is an important indicator of severity and health
effects may relate to the duration of coma during the exposure event. The acute poisoning may
lead directly to irreversible tissue damage, usually to the brain, but also the heart. Reperfusion
injury may follow apparent recovery and lead to brain injury which usually presents as
cognitive impairment and which can be fatal, but which in 60-75% of cases resolves within one
year [1,2,3].
Poisoning insufficient to cause coma can still lead to symptoms. Although headache, nausea,
unsteadiness, lack of concentration and somnolence are the commonest symptoms of carbon
monoxide poisoning, a survey of the symptoms associated with poisoning [4] indicated that
symptoms were many and varied and could persist into the recovery period. In acute carbon
monoxide poisoning the victim very frequently has a history of intermittent symptoms
compatible with carbon monoxide poisoning [5] which may have been misinterpreted by
medical attendants. A common mode of presentation in this case is unexplained intermittent
multiple symptoms. Low levels of exposure (blood levels of less than 20%COHb) are largely
asymptomatic and, accordingly, the presence of symptoms indicates exposure to, for example,
200 ppm for 6 hours in sedentary subjects. Repeated episodes indicate repeated exposure to high
level but sublethal concentrations of carbon monoxide, which may very well lead to chronic
health effects.
Although the incidence of carbon monoxide poisoning is decreasing in the UK, there is concern
that it is under-reported. As the condition becomes less frequent, awareness of the problem will
fall and under-reporting will become more common while the possibility of exposure remains.
Large numbers of homes have combustion-based heating systems and a 2006 survey in Greater
London found faulty appliances in 96/597 = 16% of homes [6].
Carbon monoxide poisoning victims can present via the emergency services, requiring urgent
admission to hospital, but also subacutely to their general practitioner, accident and emergency
department or to a telephone based service such as NHS24. In cases presenting via the
emergency services, the diagnosis is usually clear and may even be pointed out to the receiving
doctor by the emergency service staff attending the patient. When the victim presents
subacutely with symptoms, however, the diagnosis is considerably more difficult and there is a
risk that such presentations might be interpreted as symptoms for which no physical pathology
can be found, a common problem in primary care [7]. In such an event the victim may be left
either completely undiagnosed or to present to the emergency services when exposure becomes
life-threatening, with a distinct risk of multiple casualties.
In people who have been poisoned with carbon monoxide, symptoms of poisoning can persist
for indefinite periods. While respiratory, brain and cardiac damage sustained at the time of
poisoning can lead to prolonged ill health, the diffuse pattern of persistent symptoms [1] is also
suggestive of a somatoform disorder in which psychological and physiological processes
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interact to increase the awareness, severity and impact of physical symptoms. This observation
is supported by the finding of a very high incidence of affective disorder after recovery form
carbon monoxide poisoning. The incidence of disorder, however, was significantly higher in
mild as opposed to severe poisoning [8], and this strongly suggests a psychological response to
the experience of exposure to CO rather than any physically related loss of function.
Disturbances of mood, alcohol abuse, conflict with attendant medical staff and ongoing claim
for compensation are factors commonly associated with ongoing symptoms after traumatic
events and these psychosocial pressures can lead to somatoform disorder. Should this be the
case, the long term management of some patients following CO poisoning may benefit from the
incorporation of cognitive behavioural techniques that are effective in somatoform disorders.
Subtle cognitive difficulties have been reported in cases of both CO poisoning and somatoform
disorders, and this can further obscure the clinical picture.
There is thus a complex inter-relationship between the pathological, or organic, long-term
effects of CO poisoning and the somatoform disorders and medically unexplained physical
symptoms. Both may result in similar symptom patterns, and a somatoform disorder may follow
a significant trauma or illness. Where high level of CO exposure has been clearly documented,
it may be reasonable to assume that symptoms are related to toxicity. However lower levels
(sometimes much lower levels) of CO exposure have been alleged to cause ongoing symptoms.
While late symptoms from minor exposure may be plausible, these may be better understood as
Medically Unexplained Symptoms (MUS), which are currently understood in terms of cognitive
interpretation of physiological processes. .
1.2
CALL FOR TENDERS
In September 2007, the Department of Health issued a call for proposals to carry out research
into the health effects of accidental poisoning by CO, with a deadline at the end of October
2007. It suggested the following areas for potential research:
•
assessment of numbers at risk of CO exposure
•
assessment of numbers exposed
•
epidemiological study of exposure and health outcomes
•
understanding the patient experience following exposure
The team developed and submitted a proposal in late October 2007. The primary objectives
included elements of the third and fourth of these topic areas, but focusing on long-term effects;
specifically, to identify individuals from Scottish centralised hospital records individuals with a
history of accidental CO poisoning, and investigate whether there were serious long-term effects
of the incident.
1.3
INITIAL PROPOSAL
1.3.1 Team building
The project team brought together researchers from the Institute of Occupational Medicine,
located in the Scottish Central belt, and experienced in epidemiological studies; medical staff
from the University of Aberdeen, with experience in the assessment of symptoms in an
otherwise well workforce and also first hand experience in the presentation, management and
outcome of acute carbon monoxide poisoning; [2,4,5] and researchers from the University of
Edinburgh with experience in the assessment of medically unexplained physical symptoms
presenting in primary care.
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1.3.2 The proposal
The proposal submitted described a study that aimed:
•
to document the clinical experience of patients who have been victims of CO poisoning;
•
to identify the frequency of long-term problems in the patients;
•
to compare these with a control group;
•
to identify any effect of CO poisoning on health, cognitive and psychological
symptoms;
•
to recruit volunteers to a cohort for future more detailed follow-up.
The principal motivation for this suggestion was based on the observation that present policy
was targeted at prevention of the level of carbon monoxide poisoning inducing coma. If
significant long term health effects are typical of exposure to lower levels of carbon monoxide,
then any preventative policy must address this, e.g through mandatory carbon monoxide
detection, automatic shutoff safety devices for combustion heating equipment etc. But little was
known about possible long-term health effects of CO poisoning that might influence or require
such a policy.
The team proposed to investigate sequelae in patients who had been treated at hospital for CO
poisoning, in terms of symptoms of general health. We considered that symptoms could be
specific or may be very non-specific; if there is a late CO poisoning syndrome this should
involve a particular cluster of symptoms whereas an MUS process should lead to a relatively
even distribution of a wide range of symptoms. This approach has been taken in other contested
conditions (e.g. Unwin et al, 1999) [9]. A minor extension to current maintenance procedures,
to be explored, might supply data on the extent of risk in the UK population. We proposed also
a separate piece of work:
•
to explore the feasibility of setting up a reporting scheme monitoring the condition of
and risks from domestic heating appliances.
The proposal for the study of health effects planned to use the fact that hospital records in
Scotland are centralised in one database, from which cases of CO poisoning could be identified.
This was chosen as a more directly targeted approach than, for example, one based on selecting
cases for symptom outcomes, who would be more difficult to trace through existing systems,
and who would likely include only a small proportion due to CO poisoning, leading to low
power to detect effects. It was planned to evaluate a group of patients with documented CO
exposure, including their current symptoms and health, in order to build a clearer understanding
of the complex interactions between poisoning and current symptoms.
1.4
REVISED PROPOSAL FOR A PILOT STUDY
Having considered our proposal for a full project, the funder (Department of Health Policy
Research Programme) requested a revised proposal for a pilot study to investigate the feasibility
of performing a full study measuring frequency of CO poisoning throughout Scotland, which
might inform the consideration of a larger study in England. This was prepared, and
subsequently commissioned, in the spring of 2008.
The present report describes the methodology employed for the pilot study, the results obtained,
and our recommendations based on these.
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1.5
OBJECTIVES
1.5.1 Objectives for a full study
We proposed that a full study would be designed to quantify the frequency of, and characterise,
long-term health effects following CO poisoning; and to address these hypotheses:
•
Patients with a history of CO poisoning have poorer general health and cognitive
function than controls.
•
Patients with a history of CO poisoning have, in addition to the possibility of poor
general health, greater numbers of all physical symptoms suggesting a medically
unexplained symptoms process rather than a specific poisoning syndrome.
•
Some victims of carbon monoxide poisoning have a history of episodic poisoning
preceding hospital admission that goes undiagnosed by medical practitioners.
As originally proposed, and in line with these hypotheses, the objectives of a full study of CO
poisoning victims were described as:
•
to identify the incidence of long-term health problems following poisoning incidents;
•
to investigate whether these incidents have been preceded by relevant symptoms;
•
to investigate whether long-term effects are related to prior symptoms and/or loss of
consciousness;
•
to establish a cohort of recent cases for longer term follow-up;
and, in consultation with the authorities:
•
to open discussions on the feasibility of monitoring risks identified by routine
inspections and maintenance.
1.5.2 Objectives of the present pilot study
With regard to the objectives proposed for a full study, the aims of the pilot study were defined
as:
•
to investigate the feasibility of designing such a case-control study based on Scottish
hospital patient records;
•
to compile and evaluate a questionnaire using a suite of instruments validated in similar
contexts;
•
to pilot the study methods in a small sample of cases and controls, and indicate likely
response rates and statistical power for a full study.
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2 METHODS
2.1
DEVELOPING A PROTOCOL
The foundation block of this study was that the diagnoses of NHS patients treated in Scottish
Hospitals are coded on discharge and held, with demographic details, by the Information
Services Division (ISD) of NHS National Services Scotland (NSS). It was thought that, through
these codes, all victims of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning in Scotland might be
identified together with a matched control group of patients treated for acute appendicitis. The
feasibility of such a study had been established with ISD in 2002. The records so obtained
could be matched against the Community Health Index to identify relevant general practitioners
and permission sought from ISD’s Privacy Advisory Committee as to how individual
participants could be contacted directly or via their GP.
The team developed a protocol for the work, which is attached here as Appendix 1. It was
decided to select controls from those who had been hospitalised for appendectomy, on the basis
that this operation would involve a similar length of hospitalisation, but would not be expected
to generate long-term physical or mental sequelae. The pilot study was approved and it was
decided to limit the study to the NHS Lothian area since this, while targeting a substantial
population, would simplify administrative issues.
2.2
ETHICAL APPROVAL AND PERMISSIONS
Once funding was established, the Information Services Division was contacted for advice as to
how the process of contacting subjects might be now initiated. This necessitated contacting the
Division’s Caldicot Data Guardian. Unfortunately, this proved difficult due to staff retirement
and ill health within ISD occasioning significant project delay. We were advised that launching
the project required the following permissions:
•
A favourable opinion from the Community Health Index Advisory Group
•
A favourable opinion from NHS Lothian Regional Ethics Committee
•
Approval from the NSS Practitioner Services Privacy Advisory Committee
•
Permission from NHS Lothian Management
•
Recognition by NHS Lothian R&D Department.
These permissions were obtained on the basis of the project documents described below, and the
actual pilot study project started in July 2009. Copies of the relevant documents are in
Appendix 2. In order that data from the hospital records could be received by the project, we
were advised that they would have to be kept by someone with a medical qualification, and that
such a qualification was also required of the Principal Investigator. The role of PI was therefore
transferred from Dr Miller to Dr Ross.
2.3
DEVELOPMENT OF QUESTIONNAIRE
The final protocol included a draft of the postal questionnaire, designed to be self-administered.
Although these were not validated as they stood for the study, they were made up of previously
established instruments as below.
Section 1-
Personal details – formal validation thought unnecessary
Section 2 –
Lifestyle – Weight and height validation thought unnecessary.
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Cigarettes – the form asks the standard questions necessary to determine
smoker/non-smoker for cigarettes and the standard unit of exposure, the pack
year (packs per day per year).
Alcohol – The questions are a standard set validated to determine problem
drinking [10].
Section 3 –
Appendicitis and carbon monoxide – this section asks for details of the episode
of carbon monoxide poisoning (case) or appendicitis (control) as such it cannot
be validated prior to the study but data will be compared against the clinical
record in any full study so validating the section. The symptoms of carbon
monoxide poisoning and appendicitis are taken from NHS patient advice web-
sites or Department of Health information. Questions in section 3 concerning
recovery are adapted from a validated two question questionnaire validated for
recovery from stroke [11].
Section 4-
Present state of health – description of diagnosed disease and current
medication are not thought to require validation
4.3 – 4.6 make up the Personal Health Questionnaire for somatic symptoms,
depression, anxiety and panic. This has been validated in the detection of
depressive disorders [12] anxiety states [13] and somatic symptoms [14].
4.8 is a standard Activities of Daily Living score. The questions have high face
validity and conform to the general principle that to provide consistent and
reliable information, questions should focus on the concrete and the specific.
(
http://surveynet.essex.ac.uk/sqb/qb/topics/health/Disability%20(Newsletter)%
20Revised%201-06.pdf )
4.9-4.15 make up the Short Form 12 health related quality of life questionnaire
which generates Mental and Physical Component Scores. It is used
internationally and has been validated for a UK population [15].
4.16 is the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire which assesses self-reported
failures of perception and motor behaviour in addition to memory failures. It
has been shown to correlate more highly with executive functions rather than
tasks of memory, and is argued to measure failure in the control of attention and
memory [16].
Two versions were designed, with slight differences for cases and controls. The final versions of
the two questionnaires are attached in Appendix 3.
2.4
ADDITIONAL DOCUMENTS
It was anticipated that contact with subjects would be through letters forwarded by their
individual GPs, and that a small payment would be offered to the GPs for the administration of
this process. Additional documents drafted therefore included:
•
a description of the study, including contacts for queries, for GPs and subjects;
•
a letter to the GP requesting forwarding of a questionnaire pack to the subject;
•
a GP return form, including payment details;
•
a letter of invitation to the subject;
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•
a consent form for the subject.
Final versions of these documents are attached in Appendix 4.
2.5
HOSPITAL RECORDS
Our original proposal had suggested that some useful information about the nature of and
background to the incidents might be got from inspecting the hospital records of carbon
monoxide victims. However, it transpired that this would require obtaining agreement and
written consent from every hospital consultant involved; this was considered impractical, and
the intention to inspect hospital records was dropped.
2.6
SELECTING AND CONTACTING SUBJECTS
2.6.1 Definition of cases and controls
Based on the judgment that the Scottish system of centralised hospital discharge records would
provide a direct route to studying individuals suffering serious carbon monoxide poisoning,
potential cases were defined as adult cases of hospitalisation for accidental, but not intentional,
CO poisoning, and not smoke inhalation from an accidental fire.
Potential controls were defined as hospitalised for acute appendicitis, with or without peritonitis
(but not with appendix abscess). This definition was chosen as selecting individuals for
comparison who would have had a length of hospitalisation similar to the cases.
Patients with codes indicating severe mental illness or learning disability were to be excluded
from consideration.
Controls were to be selected individually for each case, matched on age, gender and deprivation
category, plus period of incident (the latter within +/- 3 years).
2.6.2 Identification of cases
Information Services Division (ISD) of NHS National Services Scotland maintains databases
including the Scottish Morbidity Register, containing hospital discharge records for all hospitals
in Scotland. There are two separate databases, one for discharges from January 1991 to March
1997, and the other from April 1997 to the present day.
Both databases contain extensive data on individual hospitalisations; they differ slightly in
coding instructions, and in some other details including the extent of their coding for indices of
deprivation.
ISD were asked to identify and select up to 80 patients from the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh,
the largest A&E hospital in the Lothians, with discharge codes corresponding to the case
definition above, which would have been coded as follows:
•
ICD10 - T58 and X47, and including those with exposure to controlled fire inside or
outside X02 and X03 but excluding X00, X01, X04-X09, and X67
•
ICD9 - 986 including E895.9, E896.9, E896.9 excluding all other accidents caused by
fire and flames and excluding E952.1
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2.6.3 Identification of controls
ISD were asked to identify patients from the same hospitals with discharge codes corresponding
to the definition above. These would have been coded as follows:
•
ICD10 K35, K35.0, K35.9 but excluding K35.1
•
ICD9 540 including 540.0, 540.9 but excluding 540.1
ISD were able to find individual single matches as controls for the 80 cases, using the
definitions and criteria listed above.
2.6.4 Checks in NHSCR
A data file containing the data for 80 cases and 80 matched controls was passed by ISD to staff
at the National Health Service Central Register (NHSCR), which contains records for every
individual registered with a GP in Scotland. The NHSCR also collates all death registrations and
facilitates a tracing service for mortality outcomes.
Here individuals who had died were identified and their death details (date and cause) extracted.
2.6.5 Transfer to PSD
It was a requirement of the ethical and data protection permissions that the research team would
not be provided with contact details for the subjects; the questionnaires would be mailed in the
first instance by Practitioner Services (PSD) of NHS National Services Scotland to the GPs of
the subjects, with a request that the GPs add each subject’s address from their records and
forward them to each subject if they considered that action not inappropriate. NHSCR sent a
file containing the subjects’ details to PSD, who updated the details of the GPs as necessary and
added the data for the names and addresses of the GPs, omitting those for subjects already
known to be deceased. A small number of subjects were identified as having transferred their
registration out of the Scottish system, in most cases to England or Wales. In those cases PSD
liaised with the authorities and identified the appropriate GP or (if not known) the appropriate
health authority.
A file containing the data on the subjects selected was sent to Aberdeen University. It was
subsequently discovered that NHSCR had omitted to pass through some of the information they
had received from ISD; in particular, there was now no indication as to who were cases and
who controls (which was needed because the questionnaires were separately tailored). The
process was back-tracked and the necessary information was added to the file and sent to
Aberdeen.
2.7
DATA PROCESSING
2.7.1 Mail-merging the questionnaires
The questionnaires were designed to be customised to certain individual data on each subject,
obtained from the data collated by ISD and PSD (see Appendix 3). This was done using the
mail-merge facilities of MS Word, linking to the final version of the data file from PSD. This
file was also used to create mailing labels for the questionnaire packs, which were then sent out
to the subjects’ GPs.
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2.7.2 Reminder mailing
Because the research team did not have the subjects’ contact details, reminders via direct
contact were not possible. After some 4 weeks a final second mailing was sent out via the GP
route for all the cases and controls for whom a response (questionnaire, refusal to participate or
refusal by GP to forward the letter) had not been received. This used the same mail-merge
techniques on an appropriately reduced data file, with reminder versions of the letters to GPs
and subjects (see Appendix 4).
2.7.3 Processing the returns
Once completed questionnaires had been received, the information they contained was entered
into MS Excel spreadsheets. There were two slightly different versions, one each for cases and
controls, as per the questionnaires.
The data files were prepared without identifying information, indexed only by the anonymised
study number. To preserve confidentiality and anonymity, it was stored separately from the
original PSD data file linking that number to the full identifying data.
2.8
ANALYSIS OF RETURNS
The data from the questionnaires were exported from the MS Excel spreadsheets into the
statistical analysis package GenStat. This program was used to summarise all the individual
response variables, and to calculate summary variables from the data collected by the SF12,
PHQ15 and CFQ sections of the questionnaire, using the algorithms published for these
questionnaires.
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3 RESULTS
3.1
RESPONSE
3.1.1 The mailings
We were provided with a spreadsheet file with the identities of a possible 77 cases and 78
controls who could be contacted to take part in the feasibility study.
On inspection of the data in the file, 16 were found to be deceased and 1 had admissions for
both appendicitis and CO poisoning; all of these were excluded from further consideration.
A further person in the case group had died before the start of the study but was sent a
questionnaire as the study was notified of the death in November 2010. (This questionnaire is
included in those refused to forward by the GP.)
This left 65 cases and 73 controls, but for 4 of these the name and address of their GP or local
health authority was not available. Contact was therefore attempted for 62 cases and 72 controls,
using the methods described in Section 2.5.
There were two rounds of mailing. From the first round, we received 76 replies from GPs or
local health authorities indicating that they would be willing to pass on the questionnaire to their
patient, while 12 said no.
By the time a second mailing was arranged, 12 questionnaires had been returned (for 1 of which
we had had no response from the GP), 1 refused and 1 was returned as sent to the wrong
address.
A reminder mailing was sent out after 4 weeks. Replies from 57 GPs or local health authorities
indicated that they were willing to pass on the questionnaire to their patient, while 17 said no
(two of who had declined at first contact also). This reminder resulted in a further 12
questionnaires. Three subjects refused to take part at this stage; there had been no response from
the GP for one of these subjects. This gave a total of 24 questionnaires returned (10 cases and
14 controls) from 134 mailed out, giving a response rate of 18%.
3.2
MORTALITY DATA
In a few cases potential participants, both carbon monoxide victims and controls, were
identified by the General Register Office for Scotland as having died before the start of the
study. In those cases, the cause of death was supplied by GRO(S).
In all, there were 17 deaths identified. One of these had died after the study had started; a
questionnaire was sent to the GP but the GP responded that they would/could not forward it.
Research Report TM/11/02
12
Table 3.1 cause of death in potential participants
Case or
Control
Gender
Age
Year of
discharge from
Hospital
Year of death
Cause of death
Suicide
y-yes, n-
no, p-
possible
Case
M
64
1999
2008
Pulmonary embolism,
deep venous thrombosis
n
Case
M
25
1988
1988
Carbon monoxide
poisoning
y
Case
M
46
1993
1993
Road traffic accident
p
Case
M
53
2007
2008
Carbon monoxide
poisoning
y
Case
M
33
1977
2000
Carbon monoxide
poisoning
y
Case
M
43
1991
2007
Drug and alcohol
poisoning
p
Case
M
45
1994
2002
Carbon monoxide
poisoning
y
Case
F
42
1994
2001
Carbon monoxide
poisoning
y
Case
M
24
1998
1988
Carbon monoxide
poisoning
y
Case
F
75
1987
2009
Metastatic small cell
lung cancer
n
Case
M
37
1997
2008
Alcohol and
amitryptiline poisoning
p
Case
M
42
1989
1993
Bronchopneumonia
with progressive
leucodystrophy
n
Case
M
52
1991
2009
End stage renal failure
due to type 1 diabetes
n
Control
M
65
1991
2004
Multiorgan failure with
T cell lymphoma
n
Control
M
54
2007
2009
Uncertain pending
laboratory studies
n
Control
M
43
1996
2002
Multiorgan failure
n
Control
F
45
1987
1993
Metastatic gastric
carcinoma
n
Table 3.1 summarises cause of death taken from the death certificate and not from ISD data.
Four of the control group had died, one of uncertain cause of death at the time of registration,
but none at a time close to date of discharge. This suggests that their deaths were unrelated to
acute appendicitis. Thirteen of the potential case group had died, with six of these dying a
suicidal death due to carbon monoxide poisoning. Of these six, two were coded as having self-
harmed in relation to their hospital admission for treatment of “accidental†carbon monoxide
poisoning preceding their death by suicide (shaded in table 1). One case died of suicide on the
day of his hospital discharge and another committed suicide two days after discharge. Another
three cases died of causes compatible with suicide, road traffic accident and drug/alcohol
poisoning.
At first sight, these observations suggested that there might be some miscoding of poisonings as
accidental in the case group identified by ISD. If this were the case generally it might indicate
that accidental carbon monoxide poisoning in Scotland is lower than indicated by hospital
discharge data. However, further light was shed on this when the full hospital discharge records
were made available: see sections below and discussion in 4.1.
3.2.1 Data Coding Analysis
Coding data for possible participants identified by ISD were only made available to the study
team after the mailings were sent out. Even after getting all the necessary permissions it proved
very difficult to get information from ISD. Admission and diagnostic codings returned to the
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13
study by ISD indicating possible study participants were analysed for the case (carbon
monoxide poisoned) group. There were 65 possible participants but since one had died before
the trial 64 records were assessed. Although ISD had been requested to filter out cases of self
harm, it emerged that they had filtered only on the discharge diagnosis code for the primary
diagnosis, and had not taken account of additional information on self harm in the admission
code and the secondary discharge code. (Up to four discharge diagnosis codes were returned for
each record.)
3.2.2 Admission codes for possible participants identified by ISD
Table 3.2 details the codes assigned to the cases at admission. Seventeen (27%) were transfers,
so their code holds no information about the nature of the incident. Of the remainder, 23 were
identified as self-harm; that is, 36% of the total, or around one-half of those not marked as
transfers.
Table 3.2 Admission coding for case group
Admission type
Frequency
Percent
Transfer
17
27
Emergency self harm
23
36
Emergency Home Accident
12
19
Emergency other injury
11
17
Emergency other
1
2
Total
64
100
3.2.3 Diagnostic codes for possible participants identified by ISD
All 64 records confirmed CO exposure as diagnosis 1. Screening of the remaining diagnosis
codes indicated that 33 cases were accidental and 31 were due to self harm. Two cases were due
to smoke inhalation.
3.2.4 Deprivation category (SIMD 2009) in possible participants
Table 3.3 shows the breakdown of the possible participants, cases and controls, by the SIMD
2009 deprivation category. It is clear that both cases and controls covered the whole range of
deprivation scores. Low numbers preclude detailed statistical analysis, but by inspection there
is no evidence of serious imbalance in deprivation status between the three groups.
Table 3.3 Deprivation category in possible participants
Control
Case
CO Accidental
CO Self Harm
1 – Most Deprived
10 (14%)
6 (18%)
7 (23%)
2
14 (19%)
10 (30%)
6 (19%)
3
5 (7%)
4 (12%)
6 (19%)
4
15 (20%)
8 (24%)
4 (13%)
5 – Least Deprived
30 (41%)
5 (15%)
8 (26%)
Total
74 (100%)
33 (100%)
31 (100%)
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14
3.2.5 Admission codes for responders (Case group)
Category of admission within the responding cases is detailed in Table 3.4. These show similar
distributions to those in Table 3.2.
Table 3.4 Admission coding for case responder
Admission type
Frequency
Percent
Transfer
3
38
Emergency self harm
2
25
Emergency Home Accident
2
25
Emergency other injury
1
12
Total
8
100
3.2.6 Diagnostic codes for Case Responders
All responders had been coded as exposed to the toxic effects of carbon monoxide. Four cases
were accidental and four had codes indicating self harm.
3.3
DATA SUMMARY
In this section we summarise the data received via the 24 returned questionnaires. Full
tabulations of all the responses received are shown in Appendix 5.
3.3.1 Responders compared with non-responders
Here we compare the characteristics of those who responded and those who didn’t (for the areas
where information was available for both). The small number of respondents will make it
difficult to generalise on patterns of non-response in relation to these factors; we can merely
note general impressions.
Overall, there did not seem to be a pattern in those who responded; for instance, the responders
were not all older females from less deprived areas. The age distributions of responders and
non-responders were very similar, both age at incident and at the time of survey. They were
also similar in the proportions of males and females and levels of deprivation.
Table 3.6 Sex of cases and controls for responders and non-responders
Responders
Non-responders
Case
Control
Case
Control
Female
2
6
17
14
Male
6
8
35
44
Table 3.7 Marital status of cases and controls for responders and non-responders
Responders
Non-responders
Case
Control
Case
Control
Single
2
2
14
19
Married
3
6
19
20
Not Known
5
6
19
19
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15
Table 3.8 Age at incident of cases and controls for responders and non-responders
N
Mean
Median
Range
Responders
Case
10
37
36.5
(20,50)
Control
14
35
35.5
(18,46)
Non-
responders
Case
52
33
32.5
(16,61)
Control
58
33
32.5
(17,61)
Table 3.9 Age now (at 01/10/2010) of cases and controls for responders and non-responders
N
Mean
Median
Range
Responders
Case
10
52
51
(43,65)
Control
14
50
52
(34,65)
Case
52
49
49
(29,71)
Non-responders
Control
58
49
49.5
(30,76)
Table 3.10 Decade of incident of cases and controls for responders and non-responders
Responders
Non-responders
Case
Control
Case
Control
80's
3
3
12
18
90's
4
8
29
28
00's
3
3
11
12
Table 3.11 Deprivation (SIMD) category of cases and controls for responders and non-responders
Responders
Non-responders
Case
Control
Case
Control
1
2
0
9
13
2
2
1
9
14
3
1
2
9
5
4
1
4
11
13
5
4
7
14
13
Table 3.12 Deprivation (Carstairs 2001) category of cases and controls for responders and non-
responders
Responders
Non-responders
Case
Control
Case
Control
1
2
1
16
7
2
3
8
5
6
3
1
3
12
18
4
3
2
15
15
5
1
0
4
12
Due to the small numbers of responders it is not sensible to analyse the responses to the entire
questionnaire. Four key summary scores were calculated: SF-12 physical and mental
component summaries (PCS & MCS respectively); the PHQ15 measure of physical symptoms
and the Cognitive Function Questionnaire. Lower scores on the SF-12 PCS and MCS indicate
poorer health; higher scores on the PHQ-15 and Cognitive Function Questionnaire (CFQ)
Research Report TM/11/02
16
indicate more physical symptoms and poorer subjective memory and concentration respectively.
Summaries of these scores are shown in Table 3.13. There is very little difference in the scores
of the cases and controls, with the exception of the cognitive function questionnaire, which the
cases scored higher than controls.
Table 3.13 Summary scores for cases and controls
Case
Control
N
Mean
Median
Range
N
Mean
Median
Range
PHQ15
8
6.0
5.0
(2, 11)
13
3.9
4.0
(1, 8)
CFQ
8
66.3
65.5
(44, 90)
12
54.8
52.0
(36, 76)
SF-12 PCS
6
37.5
36.9
(36, 42)
10
39.0
37.1
(36, 50)
SF-12 MCS
6
50.9
52.4
(42, 55)
10
50.0
51.3
(44, 55)
PHQ15 is also validly assessed in terms of cut-off values indicating abnormality. Scores of 5,
10, 15, represent cut-off points for low, medium, and high somatic symptom severity,
respectively. These are detailed in Table 3.14.
Table 3.14 Cut-off values for PHQ scores
Group
Symptom Severity
Low
Medium
High
Case
4
3
1
Control
10
3
0
Although the response rate from the study was not high enough to make any powerful
comparison between the groups there may be value in looking at the group data in relation to
normative data from the instruments used. These are detailed below.
Four other studies have generated CFQ scores in substantial groups: undergraduates and navy
personnel (mean 43.5, 95%CI 41.7-45.3, n=335)[17]; people over 65 years of age (mean 32.1,
95%CI 30.8-33.4, n=270)[18]; naval recruits (mean 33.6, 95%CI 33.1-34.1, n=2379)[19];
undergraduate students (mean 45.0, 95%CI 44.1-45.9, n=475)[20]. Both case and control
groups, therefore, have scores that are somewhat higher than expected, with the effect being
more marked for the case group. However, this observation, based onso few responses, does
not necessarily generalise to the parent population.
The normative mean SF-12 scores are standardised at 50 with a standard deviation of 10 for
both the physical (PCS) and mental (MCS) component scores [15]. Both groups therefore fall
into the normal range for MCS; both are outside one standard deviation for the normative mean
for PCS, but still within the normative range.
If one or other or both of the groups were somatising, we would expect an effect on MCS as
well as PCS. The observed differences may be due to chance, given the small numbers; if they
represent real differences, it may be that responders with genuine symptoms are self-selecting in
both groups.
3.4
AVAILABLE POOL OF CASES AND CONTROLS
3.4.1 Description of available pool
ISD, Paisley, provided us with a data file in spreadsheet form, containing all recorded hospital
admissions with discharge codes corresponding to those in our case and control definitions.
Between 1985 and 2008 there were 77,759 cases of appendicitis and 1,798 cases of carbon
Research Report TM/11/02
17
monoxide poisoning in Scotland. A higher proportion of both are males (Table 3.15). Removing
the cases that presented to the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh, as this was the hospital used for
identification of cases in the pilot study, there were 73,471 cases of appendicitis and 1,602 cases
of CO poisoning.
Table 3.15 Number of cases of CO poisoning and appendicitis in Scotland, by sex, with and without
those who attended the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh
All Cases
All except RIE
CO
APP
CO
APP
Male
1,276
44,328
1,142
41,982
Female
522
33,431
460
31,489
Total
1,798
77,759
1,602
73,471
Table 3.16 breaks this down by area. The highest number of cases of CO poisoning occurred in
Grampian (352) and Lothian (296) areas. After removing those presenting to the RIE hospital
there are still 100 cases of CO poisoning in Lothian, as there are a number of other hospitals
within this area.
Table 3.16 Number of cases of CO poisoning and appendicitis in Scotland, by area, with and without
those who attended the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh
All Cases
All except RIE
CO
APP
CO
APP
Arran & Ayrshire
135
5,142
135
5,142
Borders
41
1,654
41
1,654
Argyll & Clyde
170
5,156
170
5,156
Fife
110
5,004
110
5,004
Greater Glasgow
160
13,150
160
13,150
Highland
81
3,772
81
3,772
Lanarkshire
179
8,163
179
8,163
Grampian
352
8,336
352
8,336
Orkney
8
388
8
388
Lothian
296
11,365
100
7,077
Tayside
122
8,213
122
8,213
Forth Valley
58
4,509
58
4,509
Western Isles
11
255
11
255
Dumfries & Galloway
58
2,307
58
2,307
Shetland
17
345
17
345
Total
1798
77,759
1602
73,471
Figure 3.1 shows the temporal pattern of the cases, both at all ages and restricted to those aged
at least 16 at the time of the poisoning incident. In general, there was a peak in admissions in
the 90’s but a very sharp dip in 1996. It is not clear what may have caused this. Since about
2000, there has been a fairly steady reduction in numbers, with some suggestion of slippage in
2006-7.
Research Report TM/11/02
18
Year
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
C
O
p
o
is
o
n
in
g
c
a
s
e
s
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
120
130
140
All ages
Age 16+
Figure 3.1 Number of cases of hospitalisations for CO poisoning in Scotland, by year
For CO poisoning the peak age group is 30’s, while the peak number of appendicitis admissions
occurs in the age group 10 to 19 (Table 3.17). While there were a number of cases of both CO
poisoning and appendicitis in children in Scotland the sample drawn for the pilot did not include
very young children (youngest age at incident was 16) or older cases (maximum age at incident
was 69).
Table 3.17 Number of cases of CO poisoning and appendicitis in Scotland, by age at incident, with and
without those who attended the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh and the numbers in each age group in the pilot
sample
All Cases
All except RIE
Pilot sample
CO
APP
CO
APP
CO
APP
0 to 9
84
6,269
83
6,268
0
0
10 to 19
113
28,233
108
27,165
5
8
20 to 29
356
17,043
305
15,758
26
22
30 to 39
429
10,177
386
9,426
20
26
40 to 49
338
6,352
298
5,867
21
16
50 to 59
231
4,082
206
3,777
4
4
60 to 69
99
2,798
89
2,595
1
2
70 to 79
82
1,913
68
1,777
0
0
80 to 89
52
777
48
727
0
0
90 to 99
14
114
11
110
0
0
100+
0
1
0
1
0
0
Total
1,798
77,759
1,602
73,471
77
78
Restricting the data to cases that occurred from 1997 onwards, as this is the period for which
deprivation information is available, the number of cases reduces to 36,964 and 852 for
appendicitis and CO poisoning, respectively. These numbers reduce to 34,403 and 783,
respectively, if those presenting at RIE are removed (Table 3.18).
Research Report TM/11/02
19
Table 3.18 Number of cases of CO poisoning and appendicitis in Scotland, by age at incident, with and
without those who attended the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh, restricted to cases that occurred from 1997
onwards.
All Cases
All except RIE
CO
APP
CO
APP
0 to 9
37
2,892
37
2,892
10 to 19
57
12,277
56
11,687
20 to 29
141
7,049
122
6,366
30 to 39
207
5,210
193
4,745
40 to 49
152
3,808
138
3,447
50 to 59
119
2,495
109
2,277
60 to 69
56
1,596
52
1,471
70 to 79
39
1,106
36
1,017
80 to 89
35
453
32
425
90 to 99
9
78
8
76
100+
0
0
0
0
Total
852
36,964
783
34,403
Table 3.19 shows that the spread of cases over the SMID deprivation categories is quite even.
Table 3.19 Number of cases of CO poisoning and appendicitis in Scotland, by deprivation category
(SIMD), with and without those who attended the Royal Infirmary Edinburgh, restricted to cases that
occurred from 1997 onwards.
All Cases
All except RIE
Pilot sample
CO
APP
CO
APP
CO
APP
1 - Most Deprived
177
7,853
170
7,520
13
13
2
166
7,403
151
6,865
11
15
3
214
7,179
197
6,761
10
7
4
161
7,042
150
6,592
13
17
5 - Least Deprived
131
6,689
112
5,897
18
21
Total
849 36,166
780
33,635
65
73
3.5
PREDICTION OF LIKELY RESPONSE
If a full-scale study were carried out that attempted to contact all cases of CO poisoning in the
database system in Scotland excluding Lothian up to 2007, there would be available around
1600 potential patients with a primary discharge diagnosis code indicating accidental CO
poisoning. Taking into account all other information to eliminate all mention of self-harm
might reduce this to around 800. Since we took only a sample from the Lothian area, there are
possibly another 50 genuinely accidental cases within this area, giving ~850 in total. Assuming
a response rate of 18%, corresponding to our experience in the pilot study, we might expect to
get responses from something over 150 cases. If we were to exclude those younger than 16, this
would leave about 780 possible cases of accidental CO poisoning and perhaps some 140 returns.
The target population will have been reduced somewhat by recent deaths, as in our pilot, actual
numbers would therefore be smaller than this.
These results may not scale up to England; we understand that there are now systems in
England recording centrally hospital discharge data, but that their introduction was more recent
than in Scotland, which will presumably affect the number of available cases. We have no
information on whether central systems are available within England for forwarding invitations
and questionnaires through GPs, but our limited experience here of the few subjects who had
moved to England suggested multiple routes, through regional health authorities. At least one
Research Report TM/11/02
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of these invoked their own ethical procedures, despite all clearances given within Scotland, so it
is possible that attempts to replicate the work in England would have to deal with multiple
committees for ethical clearances and permissions. Further discussions would be necessary to
establish procedures if any such work were envisaged.
We have no reason to expect response rates to a postal questionnaire would be any better in
England than in Scotland. Non-response as great as experienced here has obvious impacts on
response numbers, and hence on statistical power to detect effects. More importantly, it
introduces possibilities for response bias; with a small proportion responding, it is simply not
possible to know how representative they may be of the underlying population.
Research Report TM/11/02
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4 DISCUSSION
4.1
OBJECTIVES AND ACHIEVEMENT
We set out in this pilot study to contact survivors of carbon monoxide poisoning, and to assess
by postal questionnaire the current state of their health. The questionnaires were standard, and
designed to address both physical and mental health.
In attempting to make arrangements for identifying and contacting subjects, there were
significant unexpected delays in obtaining permissions and making the necessary arrangements.
We expected that, given the single data system that stored the records of all Scottish
hospitalisation episodes, others would have used them to perform follow-up studies of sequelae
in patients hospitalised for causes of specific interest. However, we were unable to find any
existing system for doing so (and were advised at one point that in fact this had not been tried
before).
In the end, the advice we acted upon was that a workable procedure would require the aid of
three agencies: Information Services Division (ISD) of the NHS, to interrogate the database of
hospital records and identify cases of carbon monoxide poisoning; the General Register Office
(Scotland) (GRO(S)), to match these with records in the National Health Service Central
Register, primarily to identify those deceased since their episode, and eliminate them from
contact attempts; and Practitioner Services Department (PSD) of the NHS, who oversee the
letter-forwarding service to GPs that is the required route for contacting NHS patients. Perhaps
because such a system had not been attempted before, it took some time to obtain agreement
and permission to set up and operate the links. Even then, we found that it was necessary to
guide the process from outside. At one point, for example, we found that not all of the data
produced by ISD was ending up at PSD, and that some of what was missing was needed for the
mailing. However, we managed finally to put all the steps in place, and were able to operate a
system that mailed out information packs to the GPs of the intended respondents.
A further surprise was that although ISD had been requested to filter out cases with diagnosis
codes indicating self-harm, when we finally received the data file for the selected subjects, it
turned out that they had applied this filter to only the primary diagnosis code. In a sizeable
number of the cases selected, inspection of the second and third diagnosis codes implied self-
harm. Our initial investigation of the causes of death of the deceased had raised the possibility
that some self-harm cases had been coded as accidental, but it is now clear from the diagnosis
codes taken together that a proportion of the incidents selected were not in fact accidental. This
does not impact on coverage of the accidental group, but it has implications for the assessment
of the analysis of the pool of data available elsewhere in Scotland: selection on the first
diagnosis code alone is not sufficient to exclude self-harm. Extension of the methods to similar
data sets in England or elsewhere, if they used similar systems of multiple coding, would need
to address this issue.
We attempted to contact 134 subjects with questionnaire packs at the first mailing, and taking
account of questionnaires received and replies from GPs documenting refusal to forward, sent
108 reminder packs. We received responses from only 24 subjects, a response rate of 18%,
which was very disappointing. If this response rate were replicated in a full study, there would
be concerns about loss of statistical power; and serious doubts about the representativeness of
the data collected, and about possible response biases. (If a future study screened all diagnosis
codes for self harm, the pool of available cases numbers would be reduced even further.) It is
likely that such a study would not be considered reliable.
Research Report TM/11/02
22
The reasons for the massive non-response cannot be identified precisely, but some information
is available. A small fee was offered to GPs for their administration costs associated with
forwarding on each information pack. Some GPs claimed the fee, and some returned their
forms without claiming. A count of these returns gives a lower bound on the number of
forwardings: we received 76 from the first phase and 57 from the second. We cannot tell how
many forwardings were not claimed for. Of the 24 responses, there was no form returned by the
associated GP for one respondent, so we know there were some.
We believe that the GP route of letter forwarding places a barrier in front of research that
reduces response. [21,22] What is clear, however, is that the main non-response must have been
with the patients themselves. Although a timely round of reminders improved the response
from 12 to 24, it remained too low to be useful. It is possible that the questionnaire’s length was
daunting, but its elements were from standard published questionnaires, and therefore not
amenable to selective pruning. A shorter questionnaire would therefore require the omission of
whole sections, and thus would address fewer topic areas.
At the end of the day, we took and followed the advice of all the agencies involved, and
followed the prescribed procedures as faithfully as possible. Our experience was that, using this
system, we achieved a response rate from former carbon monoxide poisoning victims that was
too low to allow us to recommend a full study using these methods.
As a pilot study, this project was never expected to produce sufficient data for statistical
analyses to provide robust conclusions. The low response rate, with its implication of a possibly
unrepresentative response, adds to the need for caution in interpreting that data that have been
collected, since any of the differences observed could easily be due to chance.
4.2
POSSIBILITIES FOR FURTHER WORK
4.2.1 Linkage studies
Once the sample of study subjects had been drawn, they were matched at the NHSCR and those
known to be deceased were identified and no contact was attempted for them. As a by-product
of this process, we were able to inspect the causes of death of the 17 patients known to have
died. Of the 13 selected as CO poisoning cases, 6 deaths were recorded as suicides. Although
these numbers are small, the proportion of suicides among them seems extraordinarily high.
This raises the possibility that, in some cases at least, victims of intentional carbon monoxide
poisoning are given hospital discharge codes indicating accidental poisoning. As we have seen,
it might be necessary to examine secondary codes to avoid counting these as accidental.
It would be simple and inexpensive to use the methods we have developed to see whether this
pattern is replicated across Scotland. This would require a cross-matching of all Scottish
hospital records showing discharge codes corresponding to accidental CO poisoning with the
mortality records in the NHSCR, and inspection of the codes there for underlying cause of
death.
If it were found that the proportion of suicides was unusually high compared with national rates,
this could be interpreted as additional support for the notion that a proportion of attempted
suicides by CO are miscoded as accidental in the hospital records.
Such a finding would have interesting policy implications, because efforts to reduce the risks of
accidental CO poisoning might not be relevant to cases of intentional self-harm. Given recent
reductions in annual incidence rates of CO poisoning, it is also possible that the true rate of
Research Report TM/11/02
23
accidental incidents is even lower, which would affect the balance of any cost-benefit analysis
of policy measures designed to further reduce the risks.
Other linkage-based studies might be designed, e.g. to examine whether hospitalisations for CO
poisoning are preceded by specific patterns of medical consultations, or any of the other data
collected routinely in the medical records systems; and whether those patterns have any
predictive power for the incidents.
4.2.2 Qualitative studies
Our pilot study has highlighted the difficulty involved in obtaining representative samples of
COP victims from routine datasets, in order to carry out a quantitative study of the health
sequelae of non-fatal carbon monoxide poisoning. Not only are the datasets produced likely to
be incomplete and, in some cases, of questionable validity, our preliminary results suggest that
patients with more severely adverse outcomes are those most likely to respond to requests for
follow-up information on symptoms.
Other approaches are available to investigate the later experience of victims of CO poisoning.
One possibility is for qualitative research, investigating the patient experience in regard to their
journey through exposure to diagnosis and subsequent care pathways, perhaps through focus
group discussions. Given the problems of non-response in our pilot study, it is not clear how
members might be recruited to these focus groups. Contact via mail-forwarding systems might
well produce similar levels of non-response in a selected sample, leading to a non-representative
sample. Recruitment through organisations that exist with the specific aim of supporting
survivors of CO poisoning might produce a higher response rate and more willing informants,
but it is quite likely that the attitudes of their members might not be a typical cross-section of
opinion. All things considered, we are not presently enthusiastic about pursuing the possibility
of qualitative research.
4.2.3 Cohort follow-up?
A third possibility is that the occurrence of a hospitalisation for CO poisoning might be taken as
an opportunity to recruit subjects to a cohort that would be actively followed up over a period of
time, with periodic examination of health status either in person or by mail or electronic
questionnaire. Setting up such a study would be complex, and would require careful design,
tailored to agreed objectives. It would have the advantage of obtaining informed consent at
recruitment, but would require a considerable length of follow-up before any results were
available. This option would involve considerable expense.
4.3
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
The present study was a pilot study, designed to investigate the usefulness of hospital discharge
records and to develop methods and assess response from patients subsequently contacted via
the prescribed channels. As such, it was not expected to produce a data set that might inform
policy. It is our judgment that if a full study were carried out and experienced similarly high
rates of non-response, its results would not be reliable or representative. We would therefore
not expect them to inform satisfactorily policy deliberations. We have no reason to expect
better response rates in England, so attempts there to follow up CO poisoning cases may
produce results that are similarly suspect as to their representativeness.
We understand from contacts in the Health Protection Agency that efforts have now begun to
use English systems to identify cases of CO poisoning, which will presumably allow frequency
to be quantified directly. If the systems in use are similar to those in Scotland, our experience
Research Report TM/11/02
24
with the data suggests that, if it is important to distinguish accidental cases from those arising
through self-harm, care may need to be taken to use all relevant diagnostic codes, primary and
secondary, to avoid counting self-harm as accidents.
Research Report TM/11/02
25
5 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
We have carried out a pilot study, based in Scotland, into the possibilities of using hospital
discharge records to identify patients surviving accidental carbon monoxide poisoning, and of
asking them to complete a survey questionnaire on their current and recent health, in order to
probe physical, neurological and mental sequelae of the poisoning incident.
We have found that it is possible to have questionnaires and associated documents forwarded to
the selected subjects in at least a proportion of cases, but have found that it is not possible to
track the progress of all contact attempts. The level of response, in completed and returned
questionnaires, was disappointing and unsatisfactory at only 18%. We therefore do not
recommend that the methods developed be employed in a full study. We have no reason to
expect better response rates in England, and therefore do not recommend attempting to study
sequelae of CO poisoning by questionnaire in England. We also caution against attempting to
interpret the data collected in this pilot as showing differences representative of the parent
population; this was never intended, and is doubly unreliable given the low response rate.
It is clear that centralised record systems can be used to enumerate cases corresponding to a
particular diagnostic definition such as accidental CO poisoning. We expect that current efforts
to perform such enumerations within England will be useful, but we advise care in interpreting
individual diagnostic codes, since it is clear that secondary codes may contain additional and
important information. We note also that study of hospital records will not capture all cases of
chronic low-level poisoning, which may not be identified as such by either the patient or their
GP.
We recommend that consideration be given to other methods of investigating the sequelae of
carbon monoxide poisoning, including by linkage of events within medical records systems.
Research Report TM/11/02
26
Research Report TM/11/02
27
6 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to the staff of ISD, GRO(S), and PSD for extracting supplying data. We thank
all the GPs contacted for considering whether to forward the questionnaire packs, and especially
those who intimated their decisions. We are extremely grateful to those subjects who returned
questionnaires. This report was improved by review within IOM by Hilary Cowie.
This is an independent report commissioned and funded by the Policy Research Programme in
the Department of Health. The views expressed are not necessarily those of the Department.
Research Report TM/11/02
28
Research Report TM/11/02
29
7 REFERENCES
1.
Min SK. (1986). A brain syndrome associated with delayed neuropsychiatric sequelae
following acute carbon monoxide intoxication. Acta Psychiatr;73:80-86
2.
Coi IS. (1983). Delayed neurological sequelae in carbon monoxide intoxication. Aech
Nerol ;40:433-435
3.
Smith JS, Brandon S. (1970). Acute carbon monoxide poisoning – 3 years experience in
a defined population. Postgrad Med J;46:65-70 doi:10.1136/pgmj.46.532.65
4.
Hay AWM, Jaffer S, Davis D. (2000). Chronic carbon monoxide exposure: the CO
support study. In Carbon monoxide Toxicity, Ed Penney DG. CRC Press Ltd:419-437
5.
Crawford, R., Campbell, D.G. and Ross J.A.S. (1990) Domiciliary carbon monoxide
poisoning: recognition and treatment. Brit. Med. J. 301: 977-979
6.
Croxford, B. (2007). Gas appliance check project. London: University College,
London. http://www.hse.gov.uk/gas/domestic/uclgasfinal.pdf
7.
Burton C. (2003) Beyond somatisation: a review of the understanding and treatment of
medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). Brit J Gen Pract.;53:233-241.
8.
Chambers AC, Hopkins RO, Weaver LK, Key CW. (2008). Cognitive and affective
outcomes of more severe compared to less severe carbon monoxide poisoning. Brain
Inj;22:387-95.
9.
Unwin C, Blatchley N, Coker W, Ferry S, Hotopf M, Hull L, Ismail K, Palmer I, David
A, Wessely S. (1999). Health of UK servicemen who served in Persian Gulf War.
Lancet; 353(9148): 169-78.
10.
Ewing JA; Detecting alcoholism. The CAGE questionnaire. JAMA. 1984 Oct
12;252(14):1905-711
11.
McKevitt C et al. (2001). Two simple questions to assess outcome after stroke.
Stroke;32:681-686
12.
Rizzo R, et al. (2000). The Personal Health Questionnaire: a new screening instrument
for detection of ICD-10 depressive disorders in primary care. Psychological
Medicine;30:831-840.
13.
Hahn D, Reuter K, Harter M. (2006). Screening for affective and anxiety disorders in
medical patients: comparison of HADS, GHQ-12 and Brief-PHQ. GMS Psychosoc
Med;3:Doc09
14.
Kroenke K. (2002). The PHQ-15: validity of a new measure for evaluating the severity
of somatic symptoms. Psychosom Med.;64(2): 258-66.
15.
Ware J et al. A 12 item short-form survey: construction of scales and preliminary tests
of reliability and validity. Medical Care. 1996;34:220-223.
16.
Broadbent DE, Cooper PF, FitzGerald P, Parkes KR. (1982). The Cognitive Failures
Questionnaire (CFQ) and its correlates. Br J Clin Psychol;21:1-16.
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17.
Wallace JC, Kass SJ, Stanny CJ. (2002) The cognitive failures questionnaire revisited:
dimensions and correlates. J Gen Psychol;129:238-256.
18.
Knight RG, McMahon J, Green TJ, Skeaff CM. (2004). Some normative and
psychometric data for the geriatric depression scale and the cognitive failures
questionnaire from a sample of healthy older persons. NZ J Psychol;33:163-170
19.
Lanson GE, Alderton DL, Neideffer M, Underhill E. (1997). Further evidence on the
dimensionality and correlates of the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire. Br J Clin
Psychol; 88:29-38.
20.
Matthews G, Coyle K, Craig A. (1990). Multiple factors of cognitive failure and their
relationship with stress vulnerability. J Psychopathol Behav Assess; 12:49-65.
21.
Harris MA, Teschke KE, Levy AR. (2008). Personal privacy and public health.
Canadian J Public Health;99(4):293-296.
22.
van Teilingen ER, Douglas F, Torrance N. Clinical governance and research ethics as
barriers to UK low-risk population-based health research. BMC Public Health.
2008;8:396-402.
Research Report TM/11/02
31
APPENDIX 1: STUDY PROTOCOL
As submitted in applications for ethical approval and permissions
Research Report TM/11/02
32
Version 4 – 5 February 2009
i
Protocol for a study of the long-term effects
of carbon monoxide poisoning:
Pilot phase
Institute of Occupational Medicine, Edinburgh
University of Aberdeen
University of Edinburgh
Version 4 – 5 February 2009
iii
CONTENTS
1
BACKGROUND TO THE PROPOSED STUDY AND PILOT
1
2
AIM AND OBJECTIVES OF THE PROPOSED STUDY AND PILOT
3
2.1
Main hypotheses
3
2.2
Aims of a full study
3
2.3
Aims of this pilot study
3
3
THE PROJECT TEAM AND MANAGEMENT
4
4
CASE AND CONTROL DEFINITION AND SELECTION
5
4.1
Selection of cases and controls
5
4.2
Contacting subjects
5
5
DATA COLLECTION
7
6
DATA MANAGEMENT, CONTROL AND PROTECTION
8
7
DATA ANALYSIS
9
8
REPORTING 9
9
REFERENCES 10
Version 4 – 5 February 2009
iv
1
1
BACKGROUND TO THE PROPOSED STUDY AND PILOT
Acute carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning acts by gradually reducing the supply of oxygen carried
to tissue by the blood, through the formation of carboxyhaemoglobin. The body adapts by
increasing cardiac output, pumping more blood to compensate for its reduced oxygen content.
As the maximum cardiac output is reached, and as the myoglobin within the heart muscle is
poisoned, decompensation occurs with a catastrophic fall in cardiac output and loss of
consciousness. This may cause damage to the brain, heart or other tissues; additionally a
secondary cerebral reperfusion injury may occur after rescue and re-oxygenation.
Loss of consciousness during acute poisoning is an important indicator of severity and health
effects may relate to the duration of coma during the exposure event. The acute poisoning may
lead directly to irreversible tissue damage, usually to the brain, but also the heart. Reperfusion
injury may follow apparent recovery and lead to brain injury which usually presents as cognitive
impairment and which can be fatal, but in about 75% of cases resolves within one year (although
information on this is sparse).
Poisoning insufficient to cause coma can lead to symptoms. Although headache, nausea,
unsteadiness, lack of concentration and somnolence are the commonest symptoms of carbon
monoxide poisoning, a survey of the symptoms associated with poisoning [1] indicated that
symptoms were many and varied and could persist into the recovery period. In acute carbon
monoxide poisoning the victim very frequently has a history of intermittent symptoms
compatible with carbon monoxide poisoning [2] which may have been misinterpreted by medical
attendants. A common mode of presentation in this case is unexplained intermittent multiple
symptoms. The presence of symptoms in carbon monoxide exposure indicates high level
exposure since low level exposure (blood levels of less than 20%COHb) are largely
asymptomatic and, accordingly, the presence of symptoms indicates exposure to, for example,
200 ppm for 6 hours in sedentary subjects . Repeated episodes indicate repeated exposure to
high level but sublethal concentration of carbon monoxide which may very well lead to chronic
health effects.
Although the incidence of carbon monoxide poisoning is decreasing in the UK, there is concern
that it is under-reported. As the condition becomes less frequent, awareness of the problem will
fall and under-reporting will become more common while the possibility of exposure remains.
Large numbers of homes have combustion-based heating systems and a recent survey found
faulty appliances in 15% of homes in London.
Carbon monoxide poisoning victims can present via the emergency services requiring urgent
admission to hospital, but also subacutely to their general practitioner, accident and emergency
department or to a telephone based service such as NHS24. In cases presenting via the
emergency services, the diagnosis is usually clear and may even be pointed out to the receiving
doctor by the emergency service staff attending the patient. When the victim presents subacutely
with symptoms, however, the diagnosis is considerably more difficult and there is a risk that
such presentations might be interpreted as symptoms for which no physical pathology can be
found, a common problem in primary care [3]. In such an event the victim may be left either
completely undiagnosed or to present to the emergency services when exposure becomes life
threatening with a distinct risk of multiple casualties.
In people who have been poisoned with carbon monoxide, symptoms of poisoning can persist for
indefinite periods. While respiratory, brain and cardiac damage sustained at the time of
poisoning can lead to prolonged ill health, the diffuse pattern of symptoms is also suggestive of a
somatoform disorder in which psychological and physiological processes interact to increase the
awareness, severity and impact of physcial symptoms. Disturbances of mood, alcohol abuse,
conflict with attendant medical staff and ongoing claim for compensation are factors commonly
associated with ongoing symptoms after traumatic events and these psychosocial pressures can
2
lead to somatoform disorder. Should this be the case, the long term management of some
patients following CO poisoning may benefit from the incorporation of cognitive behavioural
techniques which are effective in somatoform disorders. Subtle cognitive difficulties have been
reported both in cases of CO poisoning and somatoform disorders and this can further obscure
the clinical picture.
There is thus a complex inter-relationship between the pathological, or organic, long-term effects
of CO poisoning and the somatoform disorders and medically unexplained physical symptoms.
Both may result in similar symptom patterns, and a somatoform disorder may follow a
significant trauma or illness. Where high level of CO exposure has been clearly documented, it
may be reasonable to assume that symptoms are related to toxicity. However lower levels
(sometimes much lower levels) of CO exposure have been alleged to cause ongoing symptoms
but it is more plausible, given current understanding of the biological effects of CO, that in these
cases the symptoms represent a somatoform disorder. This possiblity has not been assessed by
current research.
This study seeks to evaluate a group of patients with documented CO exposure, including their
current symptoms and health, and information concerning their CO poisoning incident(s) in
order to build a clearer understanding of the complex interactions between poisoning and current
symptoms.
The project team believe that the health record systems in Scotland would provide a suitable
subject base for a case-control study of the sequelae of CO poisoning in subjects who have been
hospitalised with the condition. The Institute of Occupational Medicine, located in the Scottish
Central belt, is well located for this study of Scottish victims of carbon monoxide poisonings
since most patients are residents in this area and were treated in adjacent hospitals. The
University of Aberdeen brings experience in the assessment of symptoms in an otherwise well
workforce and also first hand experience in the presentation, management and outcome of acute
carbon monoxide poisoning [2,4,5]. The University of Edinburgh has experience in the
assessment of medically unexplained physical symptoms presenting in primary care. Following
a proposal for a full project, the sponsors (NIHR of the NHS) requested a revised proposal for a
pilot study, which was commissioned. This protocol describes the methodology proposed for a
full study, and the aspects covered by the pilot phase.
3
2
AIM AND OBJECTIVES OF THE PROPOSED STUDY AND
PILOT
2.1 MAIN
HYPOTHESES
A full study would be designed to quantify the frequency of, and characterise, long-term health
effects following CO poisoning; and to address these hypotheses:
•
Patients with a history of CO poisoning have poorer general health and cognitive
function than controls
•
Patients with a history of CO poisoning have, in addition to the possibility of poor
general health, greater numbers of physical symptoms related to increased health anxiety
than controls
•
Some victims of carbon monoxide poisoning have a history of episodic poisoning
preceding hospital admission that goes undiagnosed by medical practitioners
2.2 AIMS OF A FULL STUDY
This pilot study aims to investigate and report on the feasibility of designing, on the basis of
Scottish hospital records, a case-control study of carbon monoxide victims that would:
•
identify the incidence of long-term health problems following poisoning incidents;
•
investigate whether these incidents have been preceded by relevant symptoms;
•
investigate whether long-term effects are related to prior symptoms and/or loss of
consciousness;
•
establish a cohort of recent cases for longer-term follow-up.
2.3 AIMS OF THIS PILOT STUDY
The aims of the pilot study are:
•
to investigate the feasibility of designing such a case-control study based on Scottish
hospital patient records;
•
to compile and evaluate a questionnaire using a suite of instruments validated in similar
contexts.
•
to pilot the study methods in a small sample of cases and controls, and indicate likely
response rates and statistical power for a full study.
4
3
THE PROJECT TEAM AND MANAGEMENT
This is a collaborative multidisciplinary study, bringing together experts in occupational safety,
health services research, psychology and primary and secondary care medicine.. The Medical
Director, Dr John Ross, has considerable experience in CO poisoning therapeutics. Additional
specialist expertise is provided by Dr Chris Burton (knowledge of somatoform disorders) and Dr
Claudia Pagliari (psychology). The study is led and managed by Dr Brian Miller, principal
epidemiologist at the IOM, who has a long history of managing multi-disciplinary research
studies.
CVs of the project principals are attached in Appendix 1.
Patient identifiable data will be held in the University of Aberdeen with Dr John Ross as
custodian. Anonymised data only will be transferred to IOM. Data handling and storage will be
carried out at the IOM, and will include contributions from several IOM staff, e.g. Peter Ritchie,
IT and databases; Laura McCalman, statistician; Dr John Cherrie and Hilary Cowie, senior staff
for project supervision.
The IOM has a highly developed project management and control system, overseen by a
Research Administrator, and based on project plans (tasks, staff resource allocations, non-staff
costs) drafted and maintained in MS Project. Each project is the principal responsibility of a
named Leader, supported by two senior staff appointed as Supervisor and Auditor. Regular
project meetings on both scientific and management issues are held. IOM's financial systems
feed actual spends into MS Project on a monthly basis, leading to forward revision of the plan
and its predicted financial outturn each month. Key individual weekly tasks are identified and
reported on.
5
4
CASE AND CONTROL DEFINITION AND SELECTION
4.1 SELECTION OF CASES AND CONTROLS
A Scottish Morbidity Record (SMR1) is completed for non-obstetric, non-psychiatric and day
case patients on discharge, transfer or death in all Scottish hospitals. These data, which are
administered by the Information and Statistics Division (ISD) of the NHS in Scotland’s Common
Services Agency, are unique in that they can be retrieved and used to generate contact details for
victims of accidental carbon monoxide exposure. The same data set can be used to contact a
matched control group. The study will be conducted in Scotland to advise the Policy Research
Programme elsewhere in the UK. The manifestations and sequelae of carbon monoxide
poisoning, however, are not known to be influenced by national or ethnic influences. Further,
recruitment of subjects will be primarily from a period prior to devolution when there was less
variation in health care policy and systems in Scotland in comparison to elswhere in the UK.
CO poisoning does not discriminate on the basis of ethnicity, gender, religion or sexual
orientation, and we expect that the cases will represent the societal mix. However, susceptibility
is greater in smaller and frailer people, so children and the elderly may be particularly at risk.
Also, immigrant groups may use friends and relatives for appliance maintenance rather than
registered fitters, introducing a quality/safety issue. However, there is no plan for this project to
investigate these groups preferentially. In a full study, the cases would be expected to represent
the societal mix of these groups and their risks.
From 1985-2007 there were 813 victims of carbon monoxide poisoning discharged from Scottish
Hospitals in the category of interest, which represents the maximum number of available cases
for a full study. Any non-response would limit the actual numbers studied.
We will ask the ISD to identify from the SMR1 records a control group, matched on time, age,
sex and deprivation category DEPCAT (if possible), from patients admitted for minor surgical
procedures, at a control:case ratio of 2:1. If available, DEPCAT would be assessed from current
postcodes [6], by ISD. We propose to select controls from patients admitted for surgical
treatment of appendicitis, as this represents a group of patients with a single incident acute illness
necessitating a (usually) brief hospital admission of similar duration to most (but not all) CO
poisoning episodes.
In this pilot study, after arranging the necessary clearances, we will send questionnaires out to
cases and controls via the agencies of the Information and Statistics Division and the participants
general practitioner. Explicit consent will be requested for access to the clinical record of the
hospital admission under study. Once this is obtained, a sample of potential cases will be
selected, and the availability of hospital notes checked after getting the permission of the
Hospital Caldicot guardian and with the help of the local Records Department. If a full study is
funded then hospital records of a sample of participants would be accessed by appropriate study
personel. Consent will also be requested to contact the subject in the future, for follow-up study;
this requires us to ask the subject to provide contact details.
Each step of the process will be described, as will the breadth and detail of data relevant to the
incident available from the hospital records.
4.2 CONTACTING
SUBJECTS
Permission to conduct the study with the ultimate aim of contacting subjects will be sought from
the Health Privacy Advisory Committee at the Information and Statistics Division for the NHS in
Scotland and the CHI Advisory Group in the Practitioner Services Division (PSD) for the NHS
in Scotland. Since we are going back considerably in time, the present location of potential
6
subjects would be accessed via their CHI identifier and we need permission to do this. Also we
need to add CHI numbers to our database for future follow-up and we need permission to do that
also.
Once these permissions have been obtained, the patient's general practitioner will be asked to
ascertain suitability for the study, to give permission for patient to be included and to forward the
questionnaire to the patient. Depending on response rates, questionnaires will be sent a
maximum of three times. Reminders will be sent out at three-week intervals. Each questionnaire
will include a request for subject’s address if they wish further involvement plus a consent form
to allow access to data from individual hospital records. Questionnaires will be returned to the
study team at the University of Aberdeenby prepaid and self-addressed envelopes.
Subjects returning their address for future contact would form the basis for future cohort studies.
7
5 DATA
COLLECTION
In the full study for which this study is the pilot, where possible, and with the consent of the
patient once obtained, the hospital case records relating to the incident precipitating diagnosis
will be inspected by a study researcher in order to assess the availability of objectively obtained
information such as blood carboxyhaemoglobin level and condition on admission, treatment,
outcome and confirmatory history taken at the time. The pilot study requires only that a check is
made for the availability of notes to identify a possible source of bias and to justify full access in
a follow up study.
The collection of data by postal questionnaire will require the construction of a suitable
questionnaire instrument. To encourage response, this will need to be a single user-friendly
compilation suitable for self-completion, maximum 8 sides A4. For validity and for
comparability with other research, items will be drawn from standard validated questionnaires.
Advanced drafts of the questionnaires as developed to date, which are specific for CO poisoning
cases and appendicitis controls, are attached in Appendix 3. The principal topics covered by the
questionnaires are:
* demographic data, alcohol and smoking habit
* details of symptoms before the incident, the poisoning incident precipitating hospital
admission and any subsequent exposures
* two questions about recovery from the incident and current dependency on everyday help
* symptoms experienced after the incident and their duration
* diagnosed and other disease and treatment before and after the accident, with reference to
whether (believed) caused by the accident
* current health-related quality of life (SF-12)
* a current physical disability index
* a 28-item somatic symptom, anxiety and depression Personal Health Questionnaire (PHQ)
* The Cognitive Failure Questionnaire (CFQ)
The final questionnaire will initially be trialled on a small group of volunteers and revised as
necessary before being sent out to specimen cases.
Long term health effects will be associated with an effect both on the current physical disability
index and on the SF-12 scoring which assesses physical, emotional and social function as well as
vitality, mental health, pain and general health perception. The test of cognitive failure is
included since it tests aspects of mental function impaired by carbon monoxide poisoning and is
associated with changes identified by MRI and SPECT imaging.
8
6
DATA MANAGEMENT, CONTROL AND PROTECTION
Overall responsibility for the handling of medical data will rest with the study’s Medical
Director, Dr John Ross. Accordingly all patient identifiable data will be returned to University of
Aberdeen for anonymisation and onward transfer to IOM. The data will then be handled,
organised and managed by staff from the IOM.
IOM and the Universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh are registered under the Data Protection
Act (DPA) 1998 for the collection and maintenance of health research data. All study
arrangements, including data processing within the study, will be carried out in accordance with
the DPA.
Any data identifying individuals well be held in a secure database with limited access, and
assigned an anonymous study subject number. Questionnaire and other relevant data destined
for statistical analysis will be indexed only by subject number.
Data will be stored in purpose-designed structures, probably designed as databases using MS
Access, building partly on systems and routines used successfully in other epidemiological and
exposure-survey databases carried out at IOM in recent years. The databases will be mounted on
a secure server, with appropriate limitations on access. Paper-based documents will be kept
secure under lock and key.
Patient sensitive data will be held in locked filing cabinets in a lockable office in a building with
a security system and alarms – the Liberty Safe Work Research Centre, University of Aberdeen.
9
7 DATA
ANALYSIS
We expect that a full study would be analysed using logistic regression methods appropriate for
matched case-control studies [7], allowing for the effects of confounding variables such as social
deprivation, alcohol habit, smoking and accident history.
In the pilot, the sample of data drawn will be small in size, and not necessarily representative of
the target population, so we will not attempt a formal statistical analysis or any substantive
interpretation of the data. We will however perform calculations of the power of such a study to
identify effects of various sizes, under various assumptions about response rates, and informed
by experience within the pilot study. In addition, we will request from ISD anonymised (non-
sensitive) data on the age, gender, DEPCAT (if available) and the days spent in hospital for non-
responders, in order for potential response bias to be detected and allowed for.
8 REPORTING
The report on this pilot project will describe the hospital data available, the detail in which it is
held, and the implications for study design and the selection of potential cases and controls.
Results of the piloting of the questionnaire will be applied to create a revised version where
necessary.
If a full study is commissioned, we will discuss the research with the CO Awareness group,
which exists to support victims of Carbon Monoxide poisoning, their families and friends. We
expect that this group would be a useful contact regarding patterns of symptoms seen after
carbon monoxide exposure. We also expect that this group would be a useful and influential
partner in disseminating findings from a full study.
10
9 REFERENCES
1. Hay AWM, Jaffer S, Davis D. (2000). Chronic carbon monoxide exposure: the CO support
study. In Carbon monoxide Toxicity, Ed Penney DG. CRC Press Ltd: pp419-437
2. Crawford, R., Campbell, D.G. and Ross J.A.S. (1990) Domiciliary carbon monoxide
poisoning: recognition and treatment. Brit. Med. J. 301: 977-979.
3. Burton C. (2003). Beyond somatisation: a review of the understanding and treatment of
medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS) Burton C, Brti J Gen Pract;53:233-241.
4. Taylor CL, Macdiarmid JI, Ross JAS, Osman LM, Watt SJ, Adie W, Crawford JR, Lawson
A. (2006). Objective neuropsychological test performance of professional divers reporting a
subjective complaint of forgetfulness or loss of concentration. Scandinavian Journal of Work
Environment and Health. 2006;32:311-318.
5. John A.S. Ross; Jennifer I. Macdiarmid; Liesl M. Osman; Stephen J. Watt; David J. Godden;
Andrew Lawson Health status of professional divers and offshore oil industry workers
Occupational Medicine 2007;57:254-261. doi: 10.1093/occmed/kqm005
6 Carstairs V, Morris R. Deprivation and health in Scotland. Health Bull (Edinb) 1990;
48(4):162-175
7. Breslow NE, Day NE. (1980). Statistical Methods in cancer research Volume 1 – the
analysis of case-control studies. Lyon: International Agency for Research on Cancer. (IARC
Scientific Publications No. 32)
Research Report TM/11/02
33
APPENDIX 2: PERMISSIONS AND APPROVALS
Research Report TM/11/02
34
Application for access to the Community Health Index
Title of programme, initiative or study
Long term effects of carbon monoxide poisoning: pilot study
Date received
Reference number
Section A
Staff
1 Head of Unit/ Department
(use BLOCK CAPITALS)
Title Dr
Initials
J A S
Surname
Ross
Position
Senior Lecturer, Hon Consultant
Qualifications
MB ChB PhD FRCA Hon FFOM
Address
Liberty Safe Work Research Centre
University of Aberdeen Medical School
Foresterhill Road, Aberdeen
Postcode
AB25 2ZP
Telephone number
01224 558197
Sponsoring organisation (if applicable) University of Aberdeen, Institute of Occupational Medicine
2 Principal contact
(if different from
1
above) (use BLOCK CAPITALS)
All communications will be with this person unless we are advised accordingly.
Title
Initials
Surname
Position
Qualifications
Address
Postcode
Telephone number
3 Medically qualified person
(use BLOCK CAPITALS)
State who will be responsible for ensuring the confidentiality of any data provided (the person must
be a registered medical practitioner)
Name
Dr John A S Ross
If different from (1) or (2) above, give qualifications:
4 Co-worker(s)
Title
Dr
Initials
B G
Surname
Miller
Title
Dr
Initials
C
Surname
Pagliari
Title
Dr
Initials
C
Surname
Burton
2
Section B General description of the programme, initiative, or study
Is this use for Patient care
Audit
Research
X
Planning
Other
please
specify
Provide a
brief description
including aims, objectives and methods.
(Max 300 words)
You may submit additional information needed to assess your application as a separate
document
Symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning (COP) are non-specific and may be confused with
a number of other conditions including viral illness, food poisoning and myocardial infarction
and there is considerable concern that the condition is underdiagnosed. Survivors may
suffer long term disability as a result of injury sustained at the time of poisoning but numbers
of survivors manifest a diffuse pattern of long term symptoms suggestive of somatoform
disorder. This condition alone can be disabling but may be amenable to cognitive
behavioural therapy if identified.
The main aims of a full study are to identify the incidence and nature of long term health
problems after carbon monoxide poisoning incidents, investigate whether these incidents are
preceded by undiagnosed episodes and establish a cohort of recent cases for longer-term
follow-up
.
. This pilot study will investigate the feasibility of designing such a case-control study
based on Scottish hospital patient records, compile and evaluate a questionnaire and pilot the
study methods in a small sample of cases and controls to indicate likely response rates and
statistical power for a full study.
Patients treated for accidental COP and a matched control group of patients treated for
acute appendicitis will be identified using Scottish Morbidity Records and traced using the
Community Health Index. They will be contacted via their general practitioner and asked to
complete a questionnaire regarding symptoms prior to the event, experiences during
treatment, current health, and somatisation.
Questionnaires will be returned to Dr J Ross and anonymised data relayed to the Institute of
Occupational Medicine for analysis. The analysis will be performed by the study statistician,
Dr Brian Miller.
Treating hospitals will be surveyed to see if records still exist and if the consultant in charge
is available for access permission thus establishing the viability of record access as an
investigational tool.
3
Section C Request for access to CHI
1 Patient Identifiable data
Is access to data being requested from which individuals can be identified? (e.g. names, full
postcodes, CHI numbers, NHS numbers, )
No
Yes
X
If Yes:
(a)
Give a brief description of the request. (Maximum 100 words)
Using SMR01 data we wish to identify cases of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning and
matched cases of acute appendicitis. We then wish to trace cases and to send them a
questionnaire via their general practitioner.
(b)
Please indicate which data items are involved. (Maximum 100 words)
Name, address, post code, date of birth, CHI number, date of discharge, days in hospital, hospital
name, treating consultant, general practitioner contact details.
(c)
State the specific reason why person-identifiable data are required. (Maximum 200 words)
We need to identify addresses in order to post questionnaires. We also want to pilot the viability of
access to hospital records for a larger study. Post code is required for deprivation category
assessment.
4
Section C
continued
Request for access to CHI continued
2 Type of access
(a) What level/ type of access is required? e.g.
On-line (read only access)
Download,
extract,
X
Anonymised extract.
Other
Access to CHI should be strictly limited on a need to know basis. Outline how this will be ensured
and how it will be monitored and audited and how any associated confidential data will be stored
securely. (Maximum 200 words)
It is anticipated that the necessary access to CHI can be managed within ISD
Alternatively, CHI access can be managed from Data Management Services at the College of Life
Sciences and Medicine, University of Aberdeen. Confidential data would be held on a secure
server within the College with access limited to a named member of Data Management Services
and one member of the study team. Access to the data file would be logged and recorded.
(c) Will you be linking other data to CHI?
No
X
Yes
If Yes state the source of your cases and describe how the data were obtained. (Maximum 200
words.)
5
Section C (
continued)
Request for data
3 Contacting of individuals
Indicate by ticking the box(es) that apply whether the information provided will be used to make
direct contact with:
i) Hospital consultants
ii) Other hospital staff
X
iii) General practitioners
X
iv) Study members or patients*
(*current guidance is that patients/ data subjects should never be contacted directly –
in certain circumstances contact may be made through the individual’s general
practitioner)
v) Relatives of study members or patients - please specify
vi)
Some other party - please specify
vii) No party to be contacted
Contact will be made by:
Letter
X
Telephone
X
Other (please specify)
Where an approach is to be made to patients, relatives, consultants or GPs, copies of the drafts of
the letter(s) to be used should be provided. Please send these with the application form.
4 Other data sources
Indicate sources of data other than requested (tick all boxes that apply)
Employee's records
GP records
Other
Please specify
Survey questionnaires
Please specify the survey(s)
Hospital records
Death records
6
Clinical trials
Health Board records
No other sources
7
Section D Ethical and Data Storage Considerations
1 Permission to obtain data
a)
If the written permission of consultants, Practitioners, and/ or individual patients has been
obtained, give details.
b)
If no permission has been obtained, give the reasons for not obtaining approval.
We have not identified cases or controls yet.
c)
Has an ethics committee been consulted?
A full ethics submission is being made to Lothian Research Ethics Committee
d)
Which ethics committee was it?
Lothian Research Ethics Committee
e)
What opinion was given on this study? (Written confirmation should be provided)
We await an opinion
2 Security of the information
a) Are identifiable or potentially identifiable data to be accessed?
No
Yes
X
If Yes give the registration number under which the data will be held, in compliance with the
Data Protection Act,
Reg No.
Z7266585
b)
Provide details of where the information is to be stored, in what form, and for how long.
The information will be stored in electronic form on the College of Life Sciences and
Medicine server and in paper form in locked filing cabinets in the Liberty Safe Work
Research Centre building which is protected by a security system and alarms. Patient
identifiable data will be stored for the duration of the study and not longer than five years
c)
State who will have access to the information, and how access to the data will be controlled
Dr John A S Ross. Access to the data will be controlled by secure storage of any hard
copy and by user name and password access to electronic copies
c)
What precautions will be taken to ensure that no improper use is made of CHI data.
Electronic files will be secured so that only named researchers have access to the data. In
this instance Dr John Ross.
b)
Give details of what will happen to the data once the study has been completed and confirm
that all named information will be destroyed once analyses are completed.
Once the study analysis is complete all named information held on hard copy will be
shredded and electronic copy deleted and overwritten.
8
e)
If this is a time limited study indicate how long you anticipate that the study will last
This pilot study runs till the end of July 2009 and data analyses will be complete by 31
December 2009.
I CERTIFY THAT all staff who have access to CHI data are aware that breach of
confidentiality constitutes grounds for disciplinary action.
I GUARANTEE THAT no publication will appear in any form in which an individual may be
identified unless the written permission of that individual has been obtained.
I GUARANTEE THAT all information provided in this form is correct.
Signature
Date
Please return the completed form to:
Fiona Kennedy
Scottish Health Service Centre
Crewe Road South
Edinburgh
EH4 2LF
•
If the request involves the release of patient-identifiable data, a
signed confidentiality
statement for users of NHS patient data will be required
(available from NSS).
•
Please enclose a
study protocol
(if available)
9
Research Report TM/11/02
35
APPENDIX 3: QUESTIONNAIRES
Versions for cases and controls
Research Report TM/11/02
36
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
1
of
8
Recovery from Carbon Monoxide Poisoning or Appendicitis
SECTION
Â
1
Â
–
Â
Personal
Â
Details
Â
What is your date of birth (dd/mm/yy)
__/__/__
Gender
Male
ï£
Female
ï£
1.0
What is your marital status?
Never married
ï£
Married
ï£
Divorced, widowed or
separated
ï£
1.1
What is your living situation?
Living alone
ï£
Living with
friends
ï£
Living with
partner/family
ï£
1.2
What is your highest educational qualification?
None
ï£
O Level or Standard
Grades School Certificate
ï£
A level or
Scottish Higher
ï£
HNC or
HND
ï£
University Degree
ï£
1.3
Which of the following best describes your current work status?
Employed
Self-
employed
Looking after
family or home
Unemployed
Not working and on
sickness benefits or
retired through ill health
Retired
1.4
What is your current (or most recent) job description?
_________________________________
1.5
Are you getting any type of disability benefit?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, is this as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
1.6
Are you retired due to ill health
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, is this as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
HOW TO COMPLETE THE FORM
This form asks for information about the details of your hospitalisation for carbon monoxide poisoning, about any
incidents of appendicitis that you may have experienced, and about your general health past and present.
If you have any difficulty filling in the form, it would be perfectly in order for you to ask a family member, friend or
carer to help you. If you do this, please so indicate on the last page of the questionnaire.
Please put a tick in the small boxes as appropriate e.g
.
None
ï£
O Level or Standard
Grades School Certificate
ï’
A level or
Scottish Higher
ï£
HNC or
HND
ï£
University
Degree
ï£
Please indicate either YES or NO when asked since we cannot assume that no entry means a NO e.g.
Your home or someone else’s home
Yes
ï£
No
ï’
Work premises
Yes
ï’
No
ï£
Other location
Yes
ï£
No
ï’
Please put a single number into each of the large boxes as appropriate e.g.
What is your weight?
ï£ï£ï£
kg
or
ï£ï£
st
ï£ï£
lbs
The last section (section 4.14) is different and you should circle the appropriate numbers e.g.
Do you find you forget people’s names?
4
3
2
1
0
1 0 7
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
2
of
8
SECTION 2 – Lifestyle
2.0
What is your weight?
ï£ï£ï£
kg
or
ï£ï£
st
ï£ï£
lbs
2.1
How tall are you?
ï£ï£ï£
cm
or
ï£
ft
ï£ï£
ins
2.2 Cigarettes
Have you smoked more than 100 cigarettes IN TOTAL in your life?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
2.3
If you answered YES to 2.2, please complete the following:
Current Smokers
Ex-Smokers
In what year did you stop smoking?
ï£ï£ï£ï£
How many
years
in total have you
smoked?
ï£ï£
How many
years
in total did you smoke?
ï£ï£
How many
cigarettes
do you smoke per
day?
ï£ï£
How many
cigarettes
did you smoke per
day?
ï£ï£
2.4 Alcohol
Have you ever felt you should cut down your drinking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Have people annoyed you by criticising your drinking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Have you ever felt bad or guilty about your drinking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Have you ever had a drink first think in the morning to steady your
nerves or get rid of a hangover (eye- opener)?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
SECTION 3 – Appendicitis and Carbon Monoxide
3.0
Have you ever had appendicitis requiring hospital treatment?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, how many times?
ï£ï£
3.1
If YES, in what year was your most recent episode? (yyyy)
ï£ï£ï£ï£
Â
Questions 3.2 to 3.16 refer to the episode of carbon monoxide poisoning which led to your
hospitalisation
3.2
Where were you poisoned (location)?
Your home or someone else’s home
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Work premises
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Other location
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.3
Where did the carbon monoxide come from?
Faulty central heating or heating appliance
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Engine exhaust
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Fire smoke and smoke inhalation
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Other Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
3
of
8
3.4
Just before your carbon monoxide poisoning, did you have any of these problems
(tick all that apply)?
Headache?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Breathlessness?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Chest pain?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Dizzy?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Confusion or fuzzy headedness?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Unsteadiness when walking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Vomiting and/or nausea?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Unconsciousness?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Â
3.5
Had you suffered from the same problems at the same location before the
incident that landed you in hospital ?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.6
Had you seen a doctor or nurse because of these problems before the
incident that landed you in hospital?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If you answered YES to 3.6 then how many times?
ï£ï£
Â
3.7
Were you treated in the intensive care unit?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.8
Were you only treated in an ordinary hospital ward?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.9
Were you given hyperbaric oxygen treatment?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.10
How many days were you in hospital?
ï£ï£ï£
3.11
Were you fully recovered when you left hospital?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.12
Do you feel that you have now made a complete recovery from carbon
monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.13
In the last two weeks did you require help from another person for everyday
activities?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, was this because of the effects of your carbon monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.14
Were other members of your family affected in the same incident as you
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, have they made a complete recovery
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.15
Are you involved in legal action about the incident?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.16
Have you ever been involved in legal action about the incident?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.17
In the year before your poisoning:
were you in work or looking for work?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
were you prescribed medication for two months or more?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
did you see your GP more than once?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
did you need help with any household activity?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.18
How much has carbon monoxide poisoning impaired your
current health?
Not at all
ï£
Slightly
ï£
Moderately
ï£
Quite a bit
ï£
Extremely
ï£
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
4
of
8
SECTION 4 – Present state of health
4.0
Have you ever been diagnosed with any of the following conditions?
Asthma
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Ulcer (stomach or peptic) Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Chronic lung disease
(eg chronic bronchitis, emphysema)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Hypothyroid
(underactive thyroid)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Arthritis
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Depression or anxiety Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Head injury
(with loss of consciousness)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Mental illness
(not anxiety or depression)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Stroke
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Eczema or hayfever Yes
ï£
No
ï£
High blood pressure
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Heart attack or disease Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Cancer (including leukaemia)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Migraines Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Diabetes
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Epilepsy Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Â
4.1
Have you any other diagnosed illness at the moment?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES please name the condition or conditions
4.2
Are you currently receiving any medical treatment or medication?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES please provide details
4.3
During the last 4 weeks
,
how much have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Not bothered Bothered a little Bothered a lot
Stomach pain
ï£
ï£
ï£
Back pain
ï£
ï£
ï£
Pain in your arms, legs, or joints (knees, hips, etc.)
ï£
ï£
ï£
Headaches
ï£
ï£
ï£
Chest pain
ï£
ï£
ï£
Dizziness
ï£
ï£
ï£
Fainting spells
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling your heart pound or race
ï£
ï£
ï£
Shortness of breath
ï£
ï£
ï£
Pain or problems during sexual intercourse
ï£
ï£
ï£
Constipation, loose bowels, or diarrhoea
ï£
ï£
ï£
Nausea, gas, or indigestion
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling tired or having low energy
ï£
ï£
ï£
Trouble sleeping
ï£
ï£
ï£
Â
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
5
of
8
Please use this space to list any other symptoms
Bothered a little
Â
Â
Bothered a lot
4.4
Over the last 2 weeks
,
how often have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Not at all
Several
days
More than
half the days
Nearly
every day
Little interest or pleasure in doing things
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Trouble falling or staying asleep, or sleeping too much
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling tired or having little energy
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Poor appetite or overeating
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling bad about yourself, or that you are a failure, or
have let yourself or your family down
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Trouble concentrating on things, such as reading the
newspaper or watching television
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Moving or speaking so slowly that other people could have
noticed. Or the opposite - being so fidgety or restless that
you have been moving around a lot more than usual
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Thoughts that you would be better off dead or of hurting
yourself in some way
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.5
Over the last 4 weeks
,
how often have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Not at all
Several
days
More than
half the days
Feeling nervous, anxious, on edge, or worrying a lot about different things
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling restless so that it is hard to sit still
ï£
ï£
ï£
Becoming easily annoyed or irritable
ï£
ï£
ï£
A
sudden
spell or attack
(e.g. feeling frightened, anxious, uneasy, your heart race, faint, or unable
to catch your breath)?
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.6
If you checked off any problems in section 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 or 4.4,
how difficult
have these problems made it for
you to do your work, take care of things at home, or get along with other people?
Not difficult at all
Somewhat difficult
Very difficult
Extremely difficult
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.7
Over the last 1 week
how many
units
of alcohol did you drink?
ï£ï£ï£
units
(1 UNIT is equivalent to a ½ pint of normal strength beer, lager or cider OR 1 small glass of wine OR 1 shot of spirit)
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
6
of
8
4.8
The following questions assess the degree of any disability you might have
Â
Do you usually manage to:
on your own
without difficulty
on your own but
with difficulty
only with help from
someone else
not at all
get up and down stairs?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
get around the house?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
get in and out of bed?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
cut your toenails yourself?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
bath shower or wash all over?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
go out and walk down the road?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.9 In
general,
would you say your health is
Excellent
Very good
Good
Fair
Poor
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.10
Compared to one year ago,
how would you rate your health in general now?
Much
Â
better
Â
now
Somewhat
Â
better
Â
now
About
Â
the
Â
same
Somewhat
Â
worse
Â
now
Much
Â
worse
Â
now
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.11
The following questions are about activities you might do
during a typical day
. Does your health limit you in
these activities? If so, how much?
Yes
Â
a
Â
lot
Â
Yes
Â
a
Â
little
Â
No
Â
not
Â
at
Â
all
 Â
a.
Moderate activities
e.g. moving a table, pushing a vacuum, bowling,
playing golf
ï£
ï£
ï£
b. Climbing
several
flights of stairs
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.12 During
the
past 4 weeks,
have you had any of the following problems with your work or other regular daily
activities
as a result of your physical health?
a.
Accomplished less
than you would like
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
b. Were limited in the
kind
of work or other activities
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
4.13
During the past 4 weeks,
have you had any of the following problems with your work or other regular daily
activities
as a result of any emotional problems
(such as feeling depressed or anxious)?
a.
Accomplished less
than you would like
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
b. Didn’t do work or other activities as
carefully
as usual
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
4.14
During the past 4 weeks,
how much did
pain
interfere with your normal work (including both work outside the
home and housework)?
Not
Â
at
Â
all
Slightly
Moderately
Quite
Â
a
Â
bit
Extremely
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.15
These questions are about how you feel and how things have been with you
during the past month.
(For
each question, please give the one answer that comes closest to the way you have been feeling.)
How much
during the past month:
All
the
time
Most of
the time
A good
bit of the
time
Some
of the
time
A little
of the
time
None
of the
time
a. Have you felt calm and peaceful?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
b. Did you have a lot of energy?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
c. Have you felt downhearted and depressed?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
d. Has your
health limited your social activities
(like visiting friends or close relatives)?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
7
of
8
4.16
The following questions are about minor mistakes which everyone makes from time to time, but some of which
happen more often than others. We want to know how often these things have happened to you
in the last
6 months.
Please circle the appropriate number.
Very
often
Quite
often
Occasionally
Very
rarely Never
Do you read something and find you haven’t been thinking about it
and must read it again?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find you forget why you went from one part of the house to
the other?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to notice signposts on the road?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you confuse right and left when giving directions?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you bump into people?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget whether you’ve turned off a light or a fire or
locked the door?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to listen to people’s names when you are meeting them?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you say something and realise afterwards that it might be taken
as insulting?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to hear people speaking to you when you are doing
something else?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you lose your temper and regret it?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you leave important letters unanswered for days?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget which way to turn on a road you know well but
rarely use?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to see what you want in a supermarket (although it’s
there)?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find yourself suddenly wondering whether you’ve used a
word correctly?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you have trouble making up your mind?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget appointments?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you forget where you have put something like a newspaper or a
book?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find you accidentally throw away the thing you want and keep
what you meant to throw away – as in the example of throwing away
the matchbox and putting the used match in your pocket?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you daydream when you ought to be listening to something?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget people’s names?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you start doing one thing at home and get distracted into doing
something else (unintentionally)?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find you can’t quite remember something although it’s ‘on the
tip of your tongue’?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget what you came to the shops to buy?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you drop things?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you can’t think of anything to say?
4 3
2
1 0
Â
4.17
Did you use help from another person to complete the questionnaire?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Questionnaire number 100
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CA 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
8
of
8
Do you wish the study team to send you a summary report on the study
findings?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If yes, please insert your name, mailing address and/or email below
If you have any further comments that you wish to make please use the space below.
Thank you very much for completing this questionnaire. Your help is much appreciated
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
1
of
8
Recovery from Carbon Monoxide Poisoning or Appendicitis
SECTION
Â
1
Â
–
Â
Personal
Â
Details
Â
What is your date of birth (dd/mm/yy)
__/__/__
Gender
Male
ï£
Female
ï£
1.0
What is your marital status?
Never married
ï£
Married
ï£
Divorced, widowed or
separated
ï£
1.1
What is your living situation?
Living alone
ï£
Living with
friends
ï£
Living with
partner/family
ï£
1.2
What is your highest educational qualification?
None
ï£
O Level or Standard
Grades School Certificate
ï£
A level or
Scottish Higher
ï£
HNC or
HND
ï£
University Degree
ï£
1.3
Which of the following best describes your current work status?
Employed
Self-
employed
Looking after
family or home
Unemployed
Not working and on
sickness benefits or
retired through ill health
Retired
1.4
What is your current (or most recent) job description?
_________________________________
1.5
Are you getting any type of disability benefit?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, is this as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
1.6
Are you retired due to ill health
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, is this as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
HOW TO COMPLETE THE FORM
This form asks for information about the details of your hospitalisation for appendicitis, about any incidents of
carbon monoxide poisoning that you may have experienced, and about your general health past and present.
If you have any difficulty filling in the form, we suggest you ask a family member, friend or carer to help you. If you
do this, please so indicate on the last page of the questionnaire.
Please put a tick in the small boxes as appropriate e.g
.
None
ï£
O Level or Standard
Grades School Certificate
ï’
A level or
Scottish Higher
ï£
HNC or
HND
ï£
University
Degree
ï£
Please indicate either YES or NO when asked since we cannot assume that no entry means a NO e.g.
Your home or someone else’s home
Yes
ï£
No
ï’
Work premises
Yes
ï’
No
ï£
Other location
Yes
ï£
No
ï’
Please put a single number into each of the large boxes as appropriate e.g.
What is your weight?
ï£ï£ï£
kg
or
ï£ï£
st
ï£ï£
lbs
The last section (section 4.14) is different and you should circle the appropriate numbers e.g.
Do you find you forget people’s names?
4
3
2
1
0
1 0 7
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
2
of
8
SECTION 2 – Lifestyle
2.0
What is your weight?
ï£ï£ï£
kg
or
ï£ï£
st
ï£ï£
lbs
2.1
How tall are you?
ï£ï£ï£
cm
or
ï£
ft
ï£ï£
ins
2.2 Cigarettes
Have you smoked more than 100 cigarettes IN TOTAL in your life?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
2.3
If you answered YES to 2.2, please complete the following:
Current Smokers
Ex-Smokers
In what year did you stop smoking?
ï£ï£ï£ï£
How many
years
in total have you
smoked?
ï£ï£
How many
years
in total did you smoke?
ï£ï£
How many
cigarettes
do you smoke per
day?
ï£ï£
How many
cigarettes
did you smoke per
day?
ï£ï£
2.4 Alcohol
Have you ever felt you should cut down your drinking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Have people annoyed you by criticising your drinking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Have you ever felt bad or guilty about your drinking?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Have you ever had a drink first think in the morning to steady your
nerves or get rid of a hangover (eye- opener)?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
SECTION 3 – Appendicitis and Carbon Monoxide
3.0
Have you ever had carbon monoxide poisoning?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, how many times?
ï£ï£
3.1
If YES, in what year was your most recent episode? (yyyy)
ï£ï£ï£ï£
Â
3.2
Where were you when you got appendicitis (location)?
At home
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Away from home at work
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Away from home on holiday
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Questions 3.2 to 3.13 refer to the episode of appendicitis that led to your hospitalisation.
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
3
of
8
3.3
Just before you were taken to hospital with appendicitis did you have any of these
problems (tick all that apply)?
Â
Loss of appetite?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Vomiting and/or nausea?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Constipation and/or diarrhoea?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Frequent passing of urine?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Fever?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Pain in the middle of your stomach?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Pain in the lower right hand side of your stomach?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Â
3.4
Had you suffered from the same problems before the incident that
landed you in hospital ?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.5
Had you seen a doctor or nurse because of these problems before
the incident that landed you in hospital?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If you answered YES to 3.6 then how many times?
ï£ï£
Â
3.6
Were you treated in the intensive care unit
Yes
ï£
3.7
Were you only treated on the ward without an operation
Yes
ï£
3.8
Did you have an operation to remove your appendix
Yes
ï£
3.9
How many days were you in hospital?
ï£ï£ï£
3.10
Were you fully recovered when you left hospital?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.11
Do you feel that you have now made a complete recovery from
appendicitis?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.12
In the last two weeks did you require help from another person for
everyday activities?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES, was this because of the effects of your appendicitis?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.13
Are you involved in legal action about your appendicitis?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.14
Have you ever been involved in legal action about your appendicitis?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.15
In the year before your appendicitis:
were you in work or looking for work?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
were you prescribed medication for two months or more?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
did you see your GP more than once?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
did you need help with any household activity?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.16
Did you have a burst appendix?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.17
Did you have any complications e.g. abscess, wound infection?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
3.18
Did you have to back to hospital with appendicitis?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If you answered YES to 3.18 then how many times?
ï£ï£
Â
3.19
How much has the incident of appendicitis impaired your
current health?
Not at all
ï£
Slightly
ï£
Moderately
ï£
Quite a bit
ï£
Extremely
ï£
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
4
of
8
Â
SECTION 4 – Present state of health
4.0
Have you ever been diagnosed with any of the following conditions?
Asthma
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Ulcer (stomach or peptic) Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Chronic lung disease
(eg chronic bronchitis, emphysema)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Hypothyroid
(underactive thyroid)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Arthritis
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Depression or anxiety Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Head injury
(with loss of consciousness)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Mental illness
(not anxiety or depression)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Stroke
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Eczema or hayfever Yes
ï£
No
ï£
High blood pressure
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Heart attack or disease Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Cancer (including leukaemia)
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Migraines Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Diabetes
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Epilepsy Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Â
4.1
Have you any other diagnosed illness at the moment?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES please name the condition or conditions
4.2
Are you currently receiving any medical treatment or medication?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If YES please provide details
4.3
During the last 4 weeks
,
how much have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Not bothered Bothered a little Bothered a lot
Stomach pain
ï£
ï£
ï£
Back pain
ï£
ï£
ï£
Pain in your arms, legs, or joints (knees, hips, etc.)
ï£
ï£
ï£
Headaches
ï£
ï£
ï£
Chest pain
ï£
ï£
ï£
Dizziness
ï£
ï£
ï£
Fainting spells
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling your heart pound or race
ï£
ï£
ï£
Shortness of breath
ï£
ï£
ï£
Pain or problems during sexual intercourse
ï£
ï£
ï£
Constipation, loose bowels, or diarrhoea
ï£
ï£
ï£
Nausea, gas, or indigestion
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling tired or having low energy
ï£
ï£
ï£
Trouble sleeping
ï£
ï£
ï£
Â
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
5
of
8
Please use this space to list any other symptoms
Bothered a little
Â
Â
Bothered a lot
4.4
Over the last 2 weeks
,
how often have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Not at all
Several
days
More than
half the days
Nearly
every day
Little interest or pleasure in doing things
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Trouble falling or staying asleep, or sleeping too much
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling tired or having little energy
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Poor appetite or overeating
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling bad about yourself, or that you are a failure, or
have let yourself or your family down
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Trouble concentrating on things, such as reading the
newspaper or watching television
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Moving or speaking so slowly that other people could have
noticed. Or the opposite - being so fidgety or restless that
you have been moving around a lot more than usual
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Thoughts that you would be better off dead or of hurting
yourself in some way
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.5
Over the last 4 weeks
,
how often have you been bothered by any of the following problems?
Not at all
Several
days
More than
half the days
Feeling nervous, anxious, on edge, or worrying a lot about different things
ï£
ï£
ï£
Feeling restless so that it is hard to sit still
ï£
ï£
ï£
Becoming easily annoyed or irritable
ï£
ï£
ï£
A
sudden
spell or attack
(e.g. feeling frightened, anxious, uneasy, your heart race, faint, or unable
to catch your breath)?
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.6
If you checked off any problems in section 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 or 4.4,
how difficult
have these problems made it for
you to do your work, take care of things at home, or get along with other people?
Not difficult at all
Somewhat difficult
Very difficult
Extremely difficult
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.7
Over the last 1 week
how many
units
of alcohol did you drink?
ï£ï£ï£
units
(1 UNIT is equivalent to a ½ pint of normal strength beer, lager or cider OR 1 small glass of wine OR 1 shot of spirit)
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
6
of
8
4.8
The following questions assess the degree of any disability you might have
Â
Do you usually manage to:
on your own
without difficulty
on your own but
with difficulty
only with help from
someone else
not at all
get up and down stairs?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
get around the house?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
get in and out of bed?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
cut your toenails yourself?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
bath shower or wash all over?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
go out and walk down the road?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.9 In
general,
would you say your health is
Excellent
Very good
Good
Fair
Poor
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.10
Compared to one year ago,
how would you rate your health in general now?
Much
Â
better
Â
now
Somewhat
Â
better
Â
now
About
Â
the
Â
same
Somewhat
Â
worse
Â
now
Much
Â
worse
Â
now
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.11
The following questions are about activities you might do
during a typical day
. Does your health limit you in
these activities? If so, how much?
Yes
Â
a
Â
lot
Â
Yes
Â
a
Â
little
Â
No
Â
not
Â
at
Â
all
 Â
a.
Moderate activities
e.g. moving a table, pushing a vacuum, bowling,
playing golf
ï£
ï£
ï£
b. Climbing
several
flights of stairs
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.12 During
the
past 4 weeks,
have you had any of the following problems with your work or other regular daily
activities
as a result of your physical health?
a.
Accomplished less
than you would like
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
b. Were limited in the
kind
of work or other activities
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
4.13
During the past 4 weeks,
have you had any of the following problems with your work or other regular daily
activities
as a result of any emotional problems
(such as feeling depressed or anxious)?
a.
Accomplished less
than you would like
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
b. Didn’t do work or other activities as
carefully
as usual
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
4.14
During the past 4 weeks,
how much did
pain
interfere with your normal work (including both work outside the
home and housework)?
Not
Â
at
Â
all
Slightly
Moderately
Quite
Â
a
Â
bit
Extremely
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
4.15
These questions are about how you feel and how things have been with you
during the past month.
(For
each question, please give the one answer that comes closest to the way you have been feeling.)
How much
during the past month:
All
the
time
Most of
the time
A good
bit of the
time
Some
of the
time
A little
of the
time
None
of the
time
a. Have you felt calm and peaceful?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
b. Did you have a lot of energy?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
c. Have you felt downhearted and depressed?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
d. Has your
health limited your social activities
(like visiting friends or close relatives)?
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
ï£
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
7
of
8
4.16
The following questions are about minor mistakes which everyone makes from time to time, but some of which
happen more often than others. We want to know how often these things have happened to you
in the last
6 months.
Please circle the appropriate number.
Very
often
Quite
often
Occasionally
Very
rarely Never
Do you read something and find you haven’t been thinking about it
and must read it again?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find you forget why you went from one part of the house to
the other?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to notice signposts on the road?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you confuse right and left when giving directions?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you bump into people?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget whether you’ve turned off a light or a fire or
locked the door?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to listen to people’s names when you are meeting them?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you say something and realise afterwards that it might be taken
as insulting?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to hear people speaking to you when you are doing
something else?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you lose your temper and regret it?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you leave important letters unanswered for days?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget which way to turn on a road you know well but
rarely use?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you fail to see what you want in a supermarket (although it’s
there)?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find yourself suddenly wondering whether you’ve used a
word correctly?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you have trouble making up your mind?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget appointments?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you forget where you have put something like a newspaper or a
book?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find you accidentally throw away the thing you want and keep
what you meant to throw away – as in the example of throwing away
the matchbox and putting the used match in your pocket?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you daydream when you ought to be listening to something?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget people’s names?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you start doing one thing at home and get distracted into doing
something else (unintentionally)?
4 3
2
1 0
Do you find you can’t quite remember something although it’s ‘on the
tip of your tongue’?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you forget what you came to the shops to buy?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you drop things?
4
3
2
1
0
Do you find you can’t think of anything to say?
4 3
2
1 0
Â
4.17
Did you use help from another person to complete the questionnaire?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
Questionnaire number «ID»
Â
Carbon Monoxide and Appendicitis Questionnaire
Version CO 1.10; 28 October 2008
Page
8
of
8
Do you wish the study team to send you a summary report on the study
findings?
Yes
ï£
No
ï£
If yes, please insert your name, mailing address and/or email below
If you have any further comments that you wish to make please use the space below.
Thank you very much for completing this questionnaire. Your help is much appreciated
Research Report TM/11/02
37
APPENDIX 4: SURVEY LETTERS AND DOCUMENTS
Research Report TM/11/02
38
«ID»
11 November 2010
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
Dear Dr. «Gp»
We would like to include one of your patients in the above study which is briefly described in
the participant information sheet enclosed. We hope you have no objections to this and, if so,
to pass on a letter and questionnaire to your patient on our behalf. We do not, however, wish
to circulate a questionnaire to patients who would be unable to complete it or who are unable
to give informed consent. It would, however, be permissible for a participant to complete a
questionnaire with help from a friend or relative.
We would like you to complete the enclosed form and return it to University of Aberdeen in
the postage-paid envelope provided. We would also be happy to receive the information by
telephone or e-mail to Dr. John Ross, contact details below. In return, we will arrange a small
payment to cover your administrative costs.
Provided in your opinion it is not inappropriate to do so, we would ask that you send the
enclosed letter, the study leaflet and questionnaire with a postage-paid envelope to your
patient.
The patient we are interested in is:
Name «Forename» «Surname»
NHS number: «NHS_Number»
Yours sincerely,
Dr John A S Ross
Senior Lecturer, Honorary Consultant
Section of Population Health
School of Medicine and Dentistry
University of Aberdeen
Room 1.068, Polwarth Building
Foresterhill
Aberdeen
AB25 2ZD
Phone 01224
558197
j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
«ID»
GP RESPONSE FORM
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
Please complete and return this form in the postage-paid envelope provided (or alternatively
phone the information through to Dr John Ross at 01224 558197 or by email to
j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
Name of patient: «Forename» «Surname»
Patient’s NHS number: «NHS_Number»
Please tick the following as appropriate:
I have no objection to my patient participating in the study (and have forwarded your letter to
them: _____
I do not wish my patient to participate in this study: _______
My patient is unable to give informed consent or is too disabled to be able to complete a
questionnaire: ________
Unfortunately (to the best of my knowledge), my patient is no longer alive: ________
(If applicable) date letter sent to patient: __________________
GP Name:___________________________________
GP Address:__________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
We can arrange payment by BACS – please provide sort code and bank account number for
payment:
Sort Code: ______________________
Account number: _________________
Alternatively, please indicate if you would prefer payment by cheque and provide details of
the payee and address for payment:
Payee: _________________________
Address for payment: ___________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
«ID»
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
11 November 2010
Dear «Forename» «Surname»,
What is this letter about?
I am writing from the University of Aberdeen to ask for your help with a study of the long-
term effects of carbon monoxide poisoning.
There is little information on the long-term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning
incidents, and the Department of Health would like to study this. It has therefore asked
experts from the Universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh, in collaboration with the Institute
of Occupational Medicine, a research charity in Edinburgh, to carry out a feasibility study, to
test on a small scale the methods that could be used to carry out a study.
Why is this letter addressed to me?
We have written to you because we believe you fall into one of two groups we need to study.
The first is patients who have been hospitalised in the past, because of an incident of carbon
monoxide poisoning. The other group, for comparison, have also been hospitalised, but for
appendicitis.
What am I being asked to do?
Please read carefully the enclosed Participant Information Sheet. You may also contact us for
further information if you want to.
If you decide to take part, please return the consent form and questionnaire using the pre-paid
envelope provided.
If you decide you do not want to help with this study, it would still help us if you returned the
consent form, saying no. In that case we will not contact you again.
Many thanks for taking the trouble to read through this information. We do hope that you
will wish to help.
Yours sincerely
Dr John A S Ross
Senior Lecturer, Honorary Consultant
Section of Population Health
School of Medicine and Dentistry
University of Aberdeen
Room 1.068, Polwarth Building
Foresterhill
Aberdeen
AB25 2ZD
Phone 01224
558197
j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
«ID»
page 1 of 2
Version 5 February 2010
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
Participant information sheet
You are being invited to take part in a research study run for the Department of Health by the Institute
of Occupational Medicine in Edinburgh in collaboration with the Universities of Aberdeen and
Edinburgh. Before you decide, it is important for you to understand why the research is being done
and what it will involve. Please take time to read the following information carefully and discuss it with
others if you wish. Ask us if there is anything that is not clear or if you would like more information.
Please take time to decide whether you wish to take part. We suggest that you keep this information
sheet handy for future reference.
What is the purpose of the study?
Carbon monoxide poisoning has the potential to cause long term health problems in its victims due to
heart and brain damage. In less complicated poisoning, however, it may be that long term health
effects, that could be treated, currently go unnoticed by health professionals. In order to address this
question we intend to compare the health of carbon monoxide victims treated in hospital with that of
patients treated for acute appendicitis at around the same time. This will be a difficult and complex
task and the Department of Health have asked us to conduct a feasibility study, in the first instance,
which you are being invited to join.
The feasibility study will take 12 months to complete.
Why have I been chosen?
You have been invited to take part in this study either because you have been treated for carbon
monoxide poisoning in a Scottish hospital or because you have had a short admission to hospital in
Scotland for the treatment of appendicitis.
How have I been chosen?
Your name has been chosen by reference to information held by the NHS in Scotland Information
Services Division because you were treated for carbon monoxide poisoning or acute appendicitis.
Your details have been obtained from NHS central records, only after obtaining a favourable opinion
from the Lothian Ethics Committee and permission from NHS data guardians.
What will I be asked to do?
You are asked to fill in a questionnaire about your health and return it in the freepost envelope
enclosed. If you would be prepared to be contacted again in the future so that we can follow up your
health status, please complete and sign the relevant section of the consent form and return it with the
questionnaire. If you only wish to fill in and return the questionnaire, there is no need for you to do
anything else.
Do I have to take part?
No. It is up to you to decide whether to take part. If you do decide to take part, we ask you to sign a
consent form. If you decide to take part, you are still free to withdraw at any time and without giving a
reason by contacting the research team. A decision to withdraw at any time, or a decision not to take
part, will be accepted without question and your data will be removed from the study.
What are the possible disadvantages and risks of taking part?
None
«ID»
page 2 of 2
Version 5 February 2010
What are the possible benefits of taking part?
Participation in this pilot study will have no effect on any treatment you may currently be receiving.
Results for a full study may lead in the future to improved treatments for long-term health effect from
carbon monoxide poisoning.
What if new information becomes available?
Sometimes during the course of a research project, new information becomes available about the
subject that is being studied. If this happens, the researchers will tell you about it and discuss with
you whether you want to continue in the study. If you decide to withdraw, this will be accepted without
question. If you decide to continue in the study, you will be asked to sign an updated consent form.
Will my taking part in this study be kept confidential?
All information that is collected about you during the course of the research will be kept strictly
confidential. Any information about you which leaves the research laboratory will have your name and
address removed so that you cannot be recognised from it. The University of Aberdeen and the
Institute of Occupational Medicine are registered under the Data Protection Act and you are entitled to
a copy of any record compiled about you for this study.
What will happen to the results of the research study?
If a full study is commissioned, the results will be presented at scientific meetings and published in a
scientific journal. At the end of the study, you will be sent a brief report on the findings.
Who is organising and funding the research?
This research is funded by the Department of Health and is being conducted by the Institute of
Occupational Medicine (IOM), a not-for-profit organisation based in Edinburgh, in collaboration with
experts from the Universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh.
Who has reviewed the study?
This study has been reviewed by the Lothian Ethics Committee.
Contacts for Further Information
If you have questions, you can contact the researchers
Medical Director
Project Manager
Dr John A S Ross
Dr Brian Miller
Senior Lecturer, University of Aberdeen
Principal Epidemiologist
Phone 01224 558197
Institute of Occupational Medicine
Edinburgh EH14 4AP
Pager 07623 836003
(leave your number for a return call)
Phone 0131 449 8044
(leave number on voicemail for a return call)
e-mail j.a.ross @abdn.ac.uk
e-mail brian.miller@iom-world.org
If you wish to discuss participation in this study with a qualified person who is independent of the
research team please contact
Dr Brian McKinstry,
Centre for Population Health Sciences,
University of Edinburgh,
Medical School, Teviot Place
Edinburgh
EH8 9AG
Phone 0131 650 2683
Email brian.mckinstry@ed.ac.uk
«ID»
page 1 of 1
Version 5, February 2010
CONSENT FORM
Title of Project:
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and
appendicitis: feasibility study
Medical Director:
Dr John AR Ross
Please complete this form if you are giving the researchers permission to contact you in future for the
purposes of extending the study.
Please put your initials in of Boxes 1 and 2 in this Section
Please initial boxes
1.
I confirm that I have read and understand the information sheet dated February 1
2010 for the above study and have had the opportunity to ask questions about it.
2. I agree that the researchers may contact me in the future,
2
for the purposes of extending this study only
________________________ ________________ ____________________
Your name (in capital letters)
Date
Signature
_________________________________________________ ____________________
Contact address & postcode
Phone
Please send one copy of this consent form back to the researchers in the
enclosed pre-paid envelope.
Please keep one copy of the form for your own records.
Thank you.
«ID»
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
22 June 2010
Dear Dr. «Gp»
We wrote to you on 21
st
May asking if you would consider the inclusion of one of your
patients in an investigation into the long-term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning.
We have attached the previous correspondence for your convenience. We would be grateful
if you could respond by return using the postage-paid envelope provided.
Yours sincerely
Dr John A S Ross
Senior Lecturer, Honorary Consultant
Section of Population Health
School of Medicine and Dentistry
University of Aberdeen
Room 1.068, Polwarth Building
Foresterhill
Aberdeen
AB25 2ZD
Phone 01224
558197
j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
«ID»
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
22 June 2010
Dear Dr. «Gp»
You recently kindly passed on details of our study to one of your patients, informing us that
you had no objection to their participating in the study. Unfortunately, as far as we are aware,
we have not had any contact from the patient indicating whether or not they wish to
participate in the study.
We would be grateful therefore if you could pass on this gentle reminder letter to your patient.
A postage-paid envelope is enclosed for your convenience.
The patient we are interested in is:
Name «Forename» «Surname»
NHS number: «NHS_Number»
Yours sincerely,
Dr John A S Ross
Senior Lecturer, Honorary Consultant
Section of Population Health
School of Medicine and Dentistry
University of Aberdeen
Room 1.068, Polwarth Building
Foresterhill
Aberdeen
AB25 2ZD
Phone 01224
558197
j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
«ID»
GP RESPONSE FORM
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis: feasibility
study
Please complete and return this form in the postage-paid envelope provided (or alternatively phone the
information through to Dr John Ross at 01224 558197 or by email to j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
Name of patient: «Forename» «Surname»
Patient’s NHS number: «NHS_Number»
Please tick the following as appropriate:
I have no objection to my patient participating in the study (and have forwarded your reminder letter to
them: _____
I do not wish my patient to participate in this study: _______
My patient is unable to give informed consent or is too disabled to be able to complete a questionnaire:
________
Unfortunately (to the best of my knowledge), my patient is no longer alive: ________
(If applicable) date letter sent to patient: __________________
GP Name:___________________________________
GP Address:__________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
We can arrange payment by BACS – please provide sort code and bank account number for payment:
Sort Code: ______________________
Account number: _________________
Alternatively, please indicate if you would prefer payment by cheque and provide details of the payee
and address for payment:
Payee: _________________________
Address for payment: ___________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
«ID»
Long term health effects of carbon monoxide poisoning and appendicitis:
feasibility study
22 June 2010
Dear «Forename»«Surname»
We wrote to you recently inviting you to participate in a study of the long-term health effects
of carbon monoxide poisoning. You were invited because you have been treated in hospital
for either carbon monoxide poisoning or appendicitis in the last 20 years.
The study involves a questionnaire for you to complete in your own home; with this letter you
will find copies of our original invitation letter and the study information leaflet.
If you are willing to take part in this study, we would be grateful if you would complete and
return the consent form and questionnaire, using the pre-paid envelope provided, as soon as is
convenient.
If you have already sent back the questionnaire please ignore this reminder and accept our
thanks for helping.
Yours sincerely
Dr John A S Ross
Senior Lecturer, Honorary Consultant
Section of Population Health
School of Medicine and Dentistry
University of Aberdeen
Room 1.068, Polwarth Building
Foresterhill
Aberdeen
AB25 2ZD
Phone 01224
558197
j.a.ross@abdn.ac.uk
Research Report TM/11/02
39
APPENDIX 5: TABULATIONS OF QUESTIONNAIRE
RESPONSES
Research Report TM/11/02
40
All CO Output
Age at incident
Mean
Median Range
Case
37.0
36.5 20.0-50.0
Control
35.1
35.5 18.0-46.0
Sex
Case
Control
Female 2 6
Male 6
8
Marital status
Case
Control
Divorced/Widowed/Separated 2
0
Married 4
10
Never Married
3
4
Living status
Case
Control
Living alone
4
2
Living with partner/family
5
12
Highest education
Case
Control
Degree 3
5
HNC/HND 1
2
A level/Higher
0
1
O level/Standard grade
4
2
None 2
3
Current work status
Case
Control
Employed 5
8
Self-employed 1
1
Looking after home
0
1
Unemployed 0
0
Not working – sick
2
0
Retired 2
4
Current (or most recent) job
Case
Control
Agricultural worker
0
1
Area Engineering Manager
1
0
Camera Operator/Video producer
0
1
Civil Servant
0
1
Community Psychiatric Charge Nurse
0
1
Company Director
1
0
Corporate Services Manager
0
1
Customer Assistant
1
0
Helicopter Pilot
1
0
Housewife 0
1
Housing Officer with L.A.
0
1
Joiner 0
1
Media Relations Manager
0
1
Nail technician
1
0
Plumbing, heating engineer
0
1
Printer 1
0
Security Guard
1
0
Senior Associate
0
1
Survey manager
0
1
Teacher 0
1
Trainee teacher
1
0
Undertaker 1
0
Currently getting any type of disability?
Case
Control
No 8 12
Yes 2 2
Are you retired due to ill health?
Case
Control
No 7 13
Yes 0 1
Weight (kg)
Mean
Median Range
Case
82.8
75.3 54.0
-123.4
Control
78.8
77.3
55.8 - 96.2
Height (cm)
Mean
Median Range
Case
169.3
170.2 154.9-182.9
Control
170.2
170.2 154.9-182.9
Have you smoked more than 100 cigarettes smoked in lifetime?
Case
Control
No 3 10
Yes 7 4
No controls were current smokers, 4 were ex-smokers having smoked between 1 and
20 cigarettes a day for between 4 and 15 years.
6 of the 10 cases were current smokers, smoking between 5 and 25 cigarettes a day for
between 25 and 45 years. One case was an ex-smoker.
Drinking
Case Control
Yes No Yes No
Have you ever felt you should cut down on your drinking?
2
8
3
11
Have people annoyed you by criticising your drinking?
2
8
2
12
Have you ever felt bad or guilty about your drinking?
3
7
2
12
Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning to steady your
nerves or get rid of a hangover?
2 8 0
14
Appendicitis controls – have you ever had CO poisoning?
Control
No 14
CO cases – have you ever had appendicitis requiring hospital treatment?
Case
No 9
Yes 1
Appendicitis controls - where were you when you got appendicitis?
Control
Home 12
Away 2
Holiday 0
CO cases - where were you poisoned?
Case
Home 5
Work 2
Other 3
Co cases - where did the CO come from?
Case
Faulty central heating or heating appliance
4
Engine exhaust
4
Fire smoke and smoke inhalation
1
Other 1
Appendicitis controls - Symptoms just before appendicitis
Control
Loss of appetite
10
Nausea 6
Constipation or diarrhoea
4
Frequent urination
2
Fever 5
Pain in middle of stomach
11
Pain in lower right stomach
11
CO cases - Symptoms just before CO poisoning
Case
Headache 3
Breathlessness 3
Chest pain
1
Dizziness 6
Confusion 6
Unsteadiness 4
Nausea 1
Unconsciousness 6
Had you suffered from the same problems (at the same location) before the incident
that landed you in hospital?
Case
Control
No 10 8
Yes 0 6
Have you seen a doctor or a nurse because of these problems before the incident the
landed you in hospital?
Case
Control
No 9 6
Yes 1 7
Were you treated in the intensive care unit?
Case
Control
No 5 0
Yes 3 1
Were you only treated in an ordinary hospital ward?
Case
Control
No 2 0
Yes 7 2
Appendicitis controls - Did you have an operation to remove your appendix?
Control
Yes 13
Were you fully recovered when you left the hospital?
Case
Control
No 4 7
Yes 5 6
Do you feel you have now made a complete recovery?
Case
Control
No 1 0
Yes 9 14
In the last 2 weeks did you require help from another person for everyday activities?
Case
Control
No
9
12
Yes
1
2
Was this as a result of the CO poisoning or appendicitis?
Case
Control
No 1
3
Yes 0
1
Are you involved in legal action about the incident?
Case
Control
No 9 14
Yes 1 0
Have you ever been involved in legal action about the incident?
Case
Control
No 7 13
Yes 2 0
In the year before the incident…
Case Control
Yes
No Yes No
Were you in work or looking for work?
8
2
12
2
Were you prescribed medication for 2 months or more?
4
6
1
13
Did you see your GP more than once?
4
6
7
7
Did you need help with any household activity?
1
9
0
14
Appendicitis controls - Had your appendix burst?
Control
No 8
Yes 5
Appendicitis controls - Did you suffer complications?
Control
No 12
Yes 2
Appendicitis controls - Did you need to go back to hospital?
Control
No 14
CO cases - Were you given hyperbaric oxygen treatment?
Case
No 3
Yes 4
Co cases - Were other family members affected in the same incident as you?
Case
No 7
Yes 3
CO cases - Have other family members made a complete recovery?
Case
Yes 3
How much has the incident impaired your current health?
Case
Control
Moderately 1 0
Slightly 2
3
Not at all
7
11
Have you ever been diagnosed with the following conditions?
Case Control
Yes
No Yes No
Asthma 2
8
2
12
Chronic lung disease (e.g. chronic bronchitis, emphysema)
1
8
1
13
Arthritis 2
7
4
10
Head injury (with loss of consciousness)
1
8
1
12
Stroke 0
9
0
13
High blood pressure
4
6
2
12
Cancer (including leukaemia)
0
9
0
14
Diabetes 1
8
0
14
Ulcer (stomach or peptic)
3
7
0
14
Hypothyroid 0
9
0
14
Depression or anxiety
8
2
2
12
Mental illness (not anxiety or depression)
1
9
0
14
Eczema or hayfever
1
8
3
11
Heart attack or disease
3
6
0
14
Migraines 1
9
4
10
Epilepsy 0
9
0
14
Have you any other diagnosed illnesses at the moment?
Case
Control
No 6 11
Yes 3 2
Are you currently receiving any medical treatment or medication?
Case
Control
No 2 9
Yes 8 5
During the last 4 weeks, how much have you been bothered by any of the following?
Case Control
Bothered
a little
Bothered
a lot
Not
bothered
Bothered
a little
Bothered
a lot
Not
bothered
Stomach pain
2
1
7
3
0
11
Back pain
2
2
5
4
3
7
Pain in arms,
legs or joints
6 1
3
4
3 7
Headaches 5
1
4
6
1
7
Chest pain
4
0
6
0
1
13
Dizziness 0
2
8
1
0
13
Fainting spells
0
0
10
0
0
14
Feeling heart
pound or race
4 1
5
2
0
11
Shortness of
breath
4 2
4
1
1
12
Pain or
problems during
sexual
intercourse
0 0
9
1
0
13
Constipation,
loose bowels or
diarrhoea
3 1
6
5
2 7
Nausea, gas or
indigestion
1 2
7
4
1 9
Feeling tired or
having low
energy
3 5
2
6
2 6
Trouble
sleeping
5 3
2
3
0
11
Other 1
1
0
2
1
0
Over the last 2 weeks, how often have you been bothered by any of the following
problems?
Case Control
Not
at
all
Several
days
More
than
half
the
days
Nearly
every
day
Not
at
all
Several
days
More
than
half
the
days
Nearly
every
day
Little interest of pleasure
in doing things
6 2
0
2
10
3
0
1
Feeling down,
depressed, or hopeless
6 2
0
2
10
3
0
1
Trouble falling or staying
asleep, or sleeping too
much
1 6
2
1
11
2
0
1
Feeling tired or having
little energy
2 5
2
1
7
5
0
2
Poor appetite or
overeating
4 4
2
0
12
1
1
0
Feeling bad about
yourself, or that you are
a failure, or have let
yourself or your family
down
6 1
1
2
11
2
0
1
Trouble concentrating
on things, such as
reading the newspaper
or watching television
6 1
2
1
12
1
0
1
Moving or speaking so
slowly that other people
could have noticed. Or
the opposite – being so
fidgety or restless that
you have been moving
around a lot more than
usual
7 1
2
0
12
2
0
0
Thoughts that you would
be better off dead or of
hurting yourself in some
way
8 0
1
1
14
0
0
0
Over the last 4 weeks, how often have you been bothered by any of the following
problems?
Case Control
Not
at
all
Several
days
More
than
half the
days
Not
at
all
Several
days
More
than
half the
days
Feeling nervous, anxious, on
edge, or worrying a lot about
different things
4
4
2
9
4
1
Feeling restless so that it is
hard to sit still
8
2
0
11
2
1
Becoming easily annoyed or
irritable
4
3
3
9
3
2
A
sudden
spell or attack (e.g.
feeling frightened, anxious,
uneasy, your heart race, faint,
or unable to catch your breath)
6
3
1
11
2
0
If you have checked off any problems, how difficult have these problems made it for
you to do your work, take care of things at home, or get along with other people?
Case
Control
Not difficult at all
4
8
Somewhat difficult
3
2
Very difficult
0
1
Extremely difficult
1
0
Units of alcohol in last week
Mean
Median Range
Case
9.4
6 0.0-45.0
Control
4.7
2 0.0-15.0
Degree of disability
Case Control
On your
own
without
difficulty
On your
own but
with
difficulty
Only
with help
from
someone
else
Not
at
all
On your
own
without
difficulty
On your
own but
with
difficulty
Only
with help
from
someone
else
Not
at
all
Get up
and
down
stairs?
8
2 0
0
14
0 0
0
Get
around
the
house?
9
1 0
0
14
0 0
0
Get in
and out
of bed?
9
1 0
0
13
1 0
0
Cut your
toenails
yourself?
9
1 0
0
14
0 0
0
Bath
shower
or wash
all over?
9
1 0
0
13
1 0
0
Go out
and walk
down the
road?
8
2 0
0
13
0 1
0
In general, would you say your health is…?
Case
Control
Excellent 0
2
Very good
2
7
Good 4
4
Fair 3
1
Poor 1
0
Compared to one year ago, how would you rate your health in general now?
Case
Control
Much better now
0
0
Somewhat better now
2
4
About the same
4
9
Somewhat worse now
4
1
Much worse now
0
0
Activities you might do during a typical day – how much does your health limit you in
these activities?
Case Control
No
not at
all
Yes a
little
Yes a
lot
No
not at
all
Yes a
little
Yes a
lot
a.
moderate activities
e.g. moving a
table, pushing a vacuum, bowling,
playing golf
7
3
0
12 0
2
b. climbing
several
flights of stairs
6
2
2
9
2
3
During the past 4 weeks, have you had any of the following problems with your work or
other regular daily activities as a result of your physical health?
Case Control
Yes No Yes No
a. accomplished less than you would like
4
6
4
10
b. were limited in the kind of work or other activities
3
7
4
10
During the past 4 weeks, have you had any of the following problems with your work or
other regular daily activities as a result of any emotional problems (such as feeling
depressed or anxious)?
Case Control
Yes No Yes No
a. accomplished less than you would like
4
6
1
13
b. didn’t do work or other activities as carefully as usual
4
6
1
13
During the past 4 weeks how much did pain interfere with your normal work (including
both work outside the home and housework)?
Case
Control
Not at all
6
8
Slightly 3
4
Moderately 0 1
Quite a bit
1
1
Extremely 0 0
How you feel and how things have been with you during the past month
Case Control
All
of
the
time
Most
of
the
time
A
good
bit of
the
time
Some
of the
time
A
little
of
the
time
None
of
the
time
All
of
the
time
Most
of
the
time
A
good
bit of
the
time
Some
of the
time
A
little
of
the
time
None
of
the
time
a. have you
felt calm and
peaceful?
0
5
0
3
1
1
3
6
3
1
0
1
b. did you
have a lot of
energy?
0
4
2
0
3
1
2
5
2
3
2
0
c. have you
felt
downhearted
and
depressed?
0
1
2
1
3
3
1
0
0
2
6
5
d. has your
health
limited your
social
activities
(like visiting
friends or
close
relatives)?
1
0
0
1
3
5
0
1
0
0
2
11
Case Control
Very
often
Quite
often
Occasionally
Very
rarely
Never
Very
often
Quite
often
Occasionally
Very
rarely
Never
Do you read something and find you haven’t
been thinking about it and must read it again?
2
2
4
2
0
1
1
5
5
2
Do you find you forget why you went from one
part of the house to the other?
1
1
4
4
0
0
1
6
4
3
Do you fail to notice signposts on the road?
0
0
4
2
3
0
0
1
9
3
Do you find you confuse left and right when
giving directions?
1
0
1
5
3
0
0
1
4
9
Do you bump into people?
0
0
2
3
5
0
0
3
2
8
Do you find you forget whether you’ve turned
off a light or a fire or locked the door?
0
2
3
4
1
0
1
3
5
4
Do you fail to listen to people’s names when
you are meeting them?
1
2
5
1
1
3
2
4
5
0
Do you say something and realise afterwards
that it might be taken as insulting?
0
2
5
2
1
0
1
3
6
4
Do you fail to hear people speaking to you
when you are doing something else?
0
2
6
2
0
2
1
3
6
2
Do you lose your temper and regret it?
0
1
6
2
1
2
1
4
5
2
Do you leave important letters unanswered
for days?
2
4
3
0
1
1
0
3
4
6
Do you find you forget which way to turn on a
road you know well but rarely use?
0
1
1
3
4
0
0
0
5
8
Do you fail to see what you want in a
supermarket (although it is there)?
0
4
2
2
2
0
0
3
7
4
Do you find yourself suddenly wondering
whether you’ve used a word correctly?
0
0
4
4
2
0
0
4
6
4
Do you have trouble making up your mind?
1
1
5
2
1
0
1
7
5
1
Do you find you forget appointments?
0
1
2
5
2
0
1
2
4
7
Do you forget where you have put something
like a newspaper or a book?
1
4
4
1
0
0
1
4
8
1
Do you find you accidentally throw away the
thing you want and keep what you meant to
1
0
1
3
5
0
0
0
7
7
throw away?
Do you daydream when you ought to be
listening to something?
0
4
1
4
1
0
1
6
4
3
Do you find you forget people’s names?
2
4
3
1
0
2
3
4
4
1
Do you start doing one thing at home and get
distracted into doing something else
(unintentionally)?
1
3
5
1
0
0
4
4
4
2
Do you find you can’t quite remember
something although it’s ‘on the tip of your
tongue’?
1
2
5
2
0
0
5
4
5
0
Do you find you forget what you came to the
shops to buy?
0
1
4
2
2
0
0
4
7
3
Do you drop things?
0
2
3
2
2
0
0
5
6
3
Do you find you can’t think of anything to say?
2
3
3
1
1
0
0
5
6
3
Did you use help from another person to complete the questionnaire?
Case
Control
No 9 14
Yes 1 0
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