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 mai...
Objectives: Pain is one of the most frequent and burdensome symptoms for children with cancer. Psych...
Objective To examine whether children’s distress moderates the relationship between parental respons...
Objective To examine whether children’s distress moderates the relationship between parental respons...
Chronic or recurrent pain is a widespread health issue that affects a large proportion of the popula...
This study employed a mixed-method design to test sex-specific parent-child pain associations. Subje...
Sensitivity to pain traumatization (SPT) is defined as the propensity to develop responses to pain t...
abstract: Children's chronic pain has many contributing factors, including family environment, genet...
This study compared the psychological and physical functioning of 12 children in each of three group...
OBJECTIVE: To examine how parent factors assessed at a multidisciplinary pain clinic evaluation pre...
Introduction: The aim of this study is to determine whether presence of parents can change tolerance...
Pain is an inherently subjective experience and should be assessed and treated as such; however, it ...
Jenny Thorsell Cederberg,1 Sandra Weineland Strandskov,2 JoAnne Dahl,3 Gustaf Ljungman1 1Department ...
Numerous studies have found evidence for the role of catastrophizing about pain in adjustment to pai...
Preliminary evidence suggests that pain catastrophizing in children may be important in understandin...
Background: Chronic pain is one of the most prevalent health conditions, affecting up to 30% of adul...
Objectives: Pain is one of the most frequent and burdensome symptoms for children with cancer. Psych...
Objective To examine whether children’s distress moderates the relationship between parental respons...
Objective To examine whether children’s distress moderates the relationship between parental respons...
Chronic or recurrent pain is a widespread health issue that affects a large proportion of the popula...
This study employed a mixed-method design to test sex-specific parent-child pain associations. Subje...
Sensitivity to pain traumatization (SPT) is defined as the propensity to develop responses to pain t...
abstract: Children's chronic pain has many contributing factors, including family environment, genet...
This study compared the psychological and physical functioning of 12 children in each of three group...
OBJECTIVE: To examine how parent factors assessed at a multidisciplinary pain clinic evaluation pre...
Introduction: The aim of this study is to determine whether presence of parents can change tolerance...
Pain is an inherently subjective experience and should be assessed and treated as such; however, it ...
Jenny Thorsell Cederberg,1 Sandra Weineland Strandskov,2 JoAnne Dahl,3 Gustaf Ljungman1 1Department ...
Numerous studies have found evidence for the role of catastrophizing about pain in adjustment to pai...
Preliminary evidence suggests that pain catastrophizing in children may be important in understandin...
Background: Chronic pain is one of the most prevalent health conditions, affecting up to 30% of adul...
Objectives: Pain is one of the most frequent and burdensome symptoms for children with cancer. Psych...
Objective To examine whether children’s distress moderates the relationship between parental respons...
Objective To examine whether children’s distress moderates the relationship between parental respons...