Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic

ABSTRACT Persistent Pain (PP) in children often has a high impact on their functioning. Knowledge about how to meet the needs is insufficient, especially regarding younger children, children with comorbid psychiatric health conditions, and within different national contexts. A specialized pediatric...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ulla Caverius, Sophia Åkerblom, Jan Lexell, Marcelo Rivano Fischer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-06-01
Series:Paediatric & Neonatal Pain
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/pne2.70005
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849430326752837632
author Ulla Caverius
Sophia Åkerblom
Jan Lexell
Marcelo Rivano Fischer
author_facet Ulla Caverius
Sophia Åkerblom
Jan Lexell
Marcelo Rivano Fischer
author_sort Ulla Caverius
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Persistent Pain (PP) in children often has a high impact on their functioning. Knowledge about how to meet the needs is insufficient, especially regarding younger children, children with comorbid psychiatric health conditions, and within different national contexts. A specialized pediatric pain clinic for PP in Sweden offers assessment and interdisciplinary pain rehabilitation (IPR) and collects data on referred children and their parents in a registry. The aims of this study are to (i) describe clinically relevant aspects of children and parents at the first team assessment, (ii) investigate associations between symptoms of psychiatric comorbidity and functioning, (iii) investigate associations between symptoms of ADHD or symptoms of ASD and functioning, and (iv) describe the recommendations after the first team assessment and their rationale. A retrospective cohort study with a descriptive and exploratory design focusing on the characteristics of children (n = 510) and their parents at their first visit for specialized assessment at a tertiary pediatric pain clinic in Sweden between 2013 and 2021. Impairments and complexity appeared to increase with age, with high impact on daily and emotional functioning, especially in relation to symptoms of psychiatric comorbidity and ADHD or ASD. A majority of children and parents were uncertain about the cause of the pain. Only half of the children were recommended IPR, and numerous problems in functioning were found, not only related to pain. In agreement with previous studies describing characteristics of children with PP, there were more girls than boys and older than younger children at the first assessment. Both children and parents report several significant problems in physical, psychological, and social functioning, indicating a need for increased knowledge of PP and care in all kinds of pediatric health care and community settings. Tailored treatment interventions are recommended to improve functioning, including pain education, parental aspects, and addressing psychiatric comorbidities, with a special focus on ADHD or ASD symptoms. More thorough information to referring physicians about evaluations needed before referring to tertiary pain clinics could potentially help set the right expectations for further care and reduce the risk of diagnostic uncertainty.
format Article
id doaj-art-13ac5a3bcb814bd5b36d40447a95efc2
institution Kabale University
issn 2637-3807
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Paediatric & Neonatal Pain
spelling doaj-art-13ac5a3bcb814bd5b36d40447a95efc22025-08-20T03:28:02ZengWileyPaediatric & Neonatal Pain2637-38072025-06-0172n/an/a10.1002/pne2.70005Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain ClinicUlla Caverius0Sophia Åkerblom1Jan Lexell2Marcelo Rivano Fischer3Department of Health Sciences, Rehabilitation Medicine Lund University SwedenDepartment of Health Sciences, Rehabilitation Medicine Lund University SwedenDepartment of Health Sciences, Rehabilitation Medicine Lund University SwedenDepartment of Health Sciences, Rehabilitation Medicine Lund University SwedenABSTRACT Persistent Pain (PP) in children often has a high impact on their functioning. Knowledge about how to meet the needs is insufficient, especially regarding younger children, children with comorbid psychiatric health conditions, and within different national contexts. A specialized pediatric pain clinic for PP in Sweden offers assessment and interdisciplinary pain rehabilitation (IPR) and collects data on referred children and their parents in a registry. The aims of this study are to (i) describe clinically relevant aspects of children and parents at the first team assessment, (ii) investigate associations between symptoms of psychiatric comorbidity and functioning, (iii) investigate associations between symptoms of ADHD or symptoms of ASD and functioning, and (iv) describe the recommendations after the first team assessment and their rationale. A retrospective cohort study with a descriptive and exploratory design focusing on the characteristics of children (n = 510) and their parents at their first visit for specialized assessment at a tertiary pediatric pain clinic in Sweden between 2013 and 2021. Impairments and complexity appeared to increase with age, with high impact on daily and emotional functioning, especially in relation to symptoms of psychiatric comorbidity and ADHD or ASD. A majority of children and parents were uncertain about the cause of the pain. Only half of the children were recommended IPR, and numerous problems in functioning were found, not only related to pain. In agreement with previous studies describing characteristics of children with PP, there were more girls than boys and older than younger children at the first assessment. Both children and parents report several significant problems in physical, psychological, and social functioning, indicating a need for increased knowledge of PP and care in all kinds of pediatric health care and community settings. Tailored treatment interventions are recommended to improve functioning, including pain education, parental aspects, and addressing psychiatric comorbidities, with a special focus on ADHD or ASD symptoms. More thorough information to referring physicians about evaluations needed before referring to tertiary pain clinics could potentially help set the right expectations for further care and reduce the risk of diagnostic uncertainty.https://doi.org/10.1002/pne2.70005characteristicsfunctioningparentspediatricpersistent pain
spellingShingle Ulla Caverius
Sophia Åkerblom
Jan Lexell
Marcelo Rivano Fischer
Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic
Paediatric & Neonatal Pain
characteristics
functioning
parents
pediatric
persistent pain
title Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic
title_full Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic
title_fullStr Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic
title_short Characteristics of Children With Persistent Pain and Their Parents in a Tertiary Interdisciplinary Pain Clinic
title_sort characteristics of children with persistent pain and their parents in a tertiary interdisciplinary pain clinic
topic characteristics
functioning
parents
pediatric
persistent pain
url https://doi.org/10.1002/pne2.70005
work_keys_str_mv AT ullacaverius characteristicsofchildrenwithpersistentpainandtheirparentsinatertiaryinterdisciplinarypainclinic
AT sophiaakerblom characteristicsofchildrenwithpersistentpainandtheirparentsinatertiaryinterdisciplinarypainclinic
AT janlexell characteristicsofchildrenwithpersistentpainandtheirparentsinatertiaryinterdisciplinarypainclinic
AT marcelorivanofischer characteristicsofchildrenwithpersistentpainandtheirparentsinatertiaryinterdisciplinarypainclinic