Article
Details
Citation
Caes L, Goubert L, Devos P, Verlooy J, Benoit Y & Vervoort T (2017) Personal distress and sympathy differentially influence health care professional and parents¡¯ estimation of child procedure-related pain. Pain Medicine, 18 (2), pp. 275-282. https://doi.org/10.1093/pm/pnw083
Abstract
Objective.
Caregivers¡¯ pain estimations may have important implications for pediatric pain management decisions. Affective responses elicited by facing the child in pain are considered key in understanding caregivers¡¯ estimations of pediatric pain experiences. Theory suggests differential influences of sympathy versus personal distress on pain estimations; yet empirical evidence on the impact of caregivers¡¯ feelings of sympathy versus distress upon estimations of pediatric pain experiences is lacking. The current study explored the role of caregiver distress versus sympathy in understanding caregivers¡¯ pain estimates of the child¡¯s pain experience.?
Design, Setting, Subjects and Methods.
Using a prospective design in 31 children undergoing consecutive lumbar punctures and/or bone marrow aspirations at Ghent University Hospital, caregivers¡¯ (i.e., parents, physicians, nurses, and child life specialists) distress and sympathy were assessed before each procedure; estimates of child pain were obtained immediately following each procedure.?
Results.
Results indicated that the child¡¯s level of pain behavior in anticipation of the procedure had a strong influence on all caregivers¡¯ pain estimations. Beyond the impact of child pain behavior, personal distress explained parental and physician¡¯s estimates of child pain, but not pain estimates of nurses and child life specialists. Specifically, higher level of parental and physician¡¯s distress was related to higher child pain estimates. Caregiver sympathy was not associated with pain estimations.?
Conclusions.
The current findings highlight the important role of caregivers¡¯ felt personal distress when faced with child pain, rather than sympathy, in influencing their pain estimates. Potential implications for pain management are discussed.
Keywords
Distress; Sympathy; Child; Parents; Health Care Professionals; Pain Estimates
Journal
Pain Medicine: Volume 18, Issue 2
Status | Published |
---|---|
Publication date | 28/02/2017 |
Publication date online | 28/04/2016 |
Date accepted by journal | 28/04/2016 |
URL | |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
ISSN | 1526-2375 |
eISSN | 1526-4637 |
People (1)
Associate Professor, Psychology