McGill Pain Questionnaire

The McGill Pain Questionnaire, also known as McGill Pain Index, is a scale of rating pain developed at McGill University by Melzack and Torgerson in 1971.[1] It is a self-report questionnaire that allows individuals to give their doctor a good description of the quality and intensity of pain that they are experiencing. The users are presented with a list of 78 words in 20 sections that are related to pain.[2] The users mark the words that best describe their pain (multiple markings are allowed). Among the words, sections of these words signify different components of pain, namely, Sensory (sections 1-10), Affective (sections 11-15), Evaluative (section 16), and Miscellaneous (sections 17-20).[1]

McGill Pain Questionnaire
SynonymsMcGill Pain Index
Purposescale to rate pain

According to the European Medicines Agency it is the most frequently used measurement tool for multidimensional pain assessment in chronic pain.[3]

Sample questionnaire

GroupWords
1Flickering, Pulsing, Quivering, Throbbing, Beating, Pounding
2Jumping, Flashing, Shooting
3Pricking, Boring, Drilling, Stabbing
4Sharp, Cutting, Lacerating
5Pinching, Pressing, Gnawing, Cramping, Crushing
6Tugging, Pulling, Wrenching
7Hot, Burning, Scalding, Searing
8Tingling, Itchy, Smarting, Stinging
9Dull, Sore, Hurting, Aching, Heavy
10Tender, Taut (tight), Rasping, Splitting
11Tiring, Exhausting
12Sickening, Suffocating
13Fearful, Frightful, Terrifying
14Punishing, Grueling, Cruel, Vicious, Killing
15Wretched, Blinding
16Annoying, Troublesome, Miserable, Intense, Unbearable
17Spreading, Radiating, Penetrating, Piercing
18Tight, Numb, Squeezing, Drawing, Tearing
19Cool, Cold, Freezing
20Nagging, Nauseating, Agonizing, Dreadful, Torturing

Notes

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