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Strategies for salivary cortisol collection and analysis in research with children
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Strategies for salivary cortisol collection and analysis in research with children

Kirsten M. Hanrahan, Ann Marie McCarthy, Charmaine Kleiber, S. Lutgendorf and E. Tsalikian
Applied Nursing Research, Vol.19(2), pp.95-101
05/01/2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.apnr.2006.02.001
PMID: 16728293

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Abstract

Salivary cortisol has emerged in pediatric research as an easy-to-collect, relatively inexpensive, biologic marker of stress. Cortisol is highly variable and is responsive to a wide range of factors that should be considered when incorporating this measure into research with children. Strategies for sample collection include: (1) standardizing the time for sample collection, including baseline samples; (2) using consistent collection materials and methods; (3) controlling for certain drinks, foods, medications, and diagnoses; and (4) establishing procedures and protocols. Other strategies for laboratory analyses include: (1) selecting the appropriate assay and laboratory; (2) identifying units of measure and norms; and (3) establishing quality controls. These strategies control extraneous variables and produce reliable and valid salivary cortisol results.

Nursing Stress Bias (Epidemiology) Child Clinical Nursing Research/methods/standards Clinical Protocols Data Collection/methods Data Interpretation Statistical Humans Hydrocortisone/analysis/secretion Parents/education Patient Education as Topic Patient Selection Pediatric Nursing Questionnaires Reference Values Reproducibility of Results Saliva/chemistry/drug effects Sensitivity and Specificity Specimen Handling/methods/nursing/standards Physiological/diagnosis/metabolism Time Factors

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