Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment

OBJECTIVES: This study compared mother, father, and child self-reported pain sensitivity and psychosocial functioning during an intensive pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment. METHODS: Twenty children with chronic pain and their parents were enrolled in an intensive pediatric pain rehabilitation...

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Main Author: Agamov, Alina
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16791
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-167912019-03-29T06:43:16Z Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment Agamov, Alina Clinical psychology Child and adolescent Chronic pain Pain medicine Pain research OBJECTIVES: This study compared mother, father, and child self-reported pain sensitivity and psychosocial functioning during an intensive pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment. METHODS: Twenty children with chronic pain and their parents were enrolled in an intensive pediatric pain rehabilitation center and completed measures of pain sensitivity, fear of pain, pain catastrophizing, functional disability, and current and usual pain ratings at admission and discharge. RESULTS: Bivariate correlations and one-way ANOVAs were used. Pain sensitivity and psychosocial variables for mother, father, and child decreased from admission to discharge. There was no correlation between pain sensitivity and psychosocial variables and no significant main effect for time. CONCLUSIONS: Results indicate a need for a larger sample to further explore the relationship between these variables. 2016-07-05T18:18:30Z 2016-07-05T18:18:30Z 2016 2016-06-17T19:41:37Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16791 en_US Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Clinical psychology
Child and adolescent
Chronic pain
Pain medicine
Pain research
spellingShingle Clinical psychology
Child and adolescent
Chronic pain
Pain medicine
Pain research
Agamov, Alina
Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
description OBJECTIVES: This study compared mother, father, and child self-reported pain sensitivity and psychosocial functioning during an intensive pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment. METHODS: Twenty children with chronic pain and their parents were enrolled in an intensive pediatric pain rehabilitation center and completed measures of pain sensitivity, fear of pain, pain catastrophizing, functional disability, and current and usual pain ratings at admission and discharge. RESULTS: Bivariate correlations and one-way ANOVAs were used. Pain sensitivity and psychosocial variables for mother, father, and child decreased from admission to discharge. There was no correlation between pain sensitivity and psychosocial variables and no significant main effect for time. CONCLUSIONS: Results indicate a need for a larger sample to further explore the relationship between these variables.
author Agamov, Alina
author_facet Agamov, Alina
author_sort Agamov, Alina
title Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
title_short Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
title_full Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
title_fullStr Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
title_full_unstemmed Changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
title_sort changes in parent and child pain sensitivity over the course of pediatric pain rehabilitation treatment
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16791
work_keys_str_mv AT agamovalina changesinparentandchildpainsensitivityoverthecourseofpediatricpainrehabilitationtreatment
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