The limited ability of infants to communicate their pain and to moderate their pain experience places great importance on caregivers in accurately detecting when they are suffering. The goal of this investigation was to conduct a comparative analysis of the pain judgments of three major infant caregiver populations (parents, nurses and paediatricians) and the beliefs that each group held in regards to those judgments. This study finds theoretical grounding in the Sociocommunication Model of Infant Pain. In order to understand the role of beliefs in pain judgments, the current study controlled other variables postulated by Craig and colleagues to impact the communication between an infant in pain and his/her caregiver. Participants p...
The purpose of the study was to examine the role of the negative emotionality dimension of temperam...
Recent research has begun to examine discrete caregiver pain management behaviors in the infant imm...
Pain is an inherently subjective experience and should be assessed and treated as such; however, it ...
BACKGROUND: Research suggests that caregivers’ beliefs pertaining to infant pain and which infant p...
For over two decades, researchers have studied the expression of pain in young infants to unlock the...
BACKGROUND: Research investigating how observers empathize or form estimations of an individual expe...
The Sociocommunication Model of Infant Pain (Craig and Pillai Riddell, 2003) theorizes that materna...
Abstract Background To determine whether healthcare professionals perceive the pain of infants diffe...
Unfortunately the history of pain management in infant care has included decades of inadequate analg...
Objective To determine whether caregivers with more extreme emotional availability scores en-act dif...
BACKGROUND: Research investigating how observers empathize or form estimations of an individual exp...
BACKGROUND: Despite blatant indications, such as behavioural and contextual cues, infant pain is of...
BACKGROUND: There is considerable variability in infants’ responses to painful stimuli, including fa...
Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience, even for infants who are incapable of report...
BacKgroUnD: Pain is largely accepted as being influenced by social context. Unlike most other devel...
The purpose of the study was to examine the role of the negative emotionality dimension of temperam...
Recent research has begun to examine discrete caregiver pain management behaviors in the infant imm...
Pain is an inherently subjective experience and should be assessed and treated as such; however, it ...
BACKGROUND: Research suggests that caregivers’ beliefs pertaining to infant pain and which infant p...
For over two decades, researchers have studied the expression of pain in young infants to unlock the...
BACKGROUND: Research investigating how observers empathize or form estimations of an individual expe...
The Sociocommunication Model of Infant Pain (Craig and Pillai Riddell, 2003) theorizes that materna...
Abstract Background To determine whether healthcare professionals perceive the pain of infants diffe...
Unfortunately the history of pain management in infant care has included decades of inadequate analg...
Objective To determine whether caregivers with more extreme emotional availability scores en-act dif...
BACKGROUND: Research investigating how observers empathize or form estimations of an individual exp...
BACKGROUND: Despite blatant indications, such as behavioural and contextual cues, infant pain is of...
BACKGROUND: There is considerable variability in infants’ responses to painful stimuli, including fa...
Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience, even for infants who are incapable of report...
BacKgroUnD: Pain is largely accepted as being influenced by social context. Unlike most other devel...
The purpose of the study was to examine the role of the negative emotionality dimension of temperam...
Recent research has begun to examine discrete caregiver pain management behaviors in the infant imm...
Pain is an inherently subjective experience and should be assessed and treated as such; however, it ...