Canadian journal of pain = Revue canadienne de la douleur
-
Parents' management of adolescent patients' postoperative pain after discharge: A qualitative study.
Background: Short hospital admission periods following pediatric inpatient surgery leave parents responsible for managing their child's postoperative pain in the community following discharge. Little is known about the experiences of parents caring for their child's postoperative pain after discharge home following inpatient surgery. Research examining parental postoperative pain management following their child's day surgery has found that parents are challenged in their pain management knowledge and practices. ⋯ Methods: Semistructured telephone interviews were conducted with seven parents between 2 weeks and 6 months after their child's discharge from hospital. Results: Identified themes were coming home without support, managing significant pain at home, and changes in the parent-child relationship. Conclusions: Parents could potentially benefit from nurses optimizing educational interventions, from receiving ongoing support of transitional pain teams, and from assistance with return to school planning.
-
Adolescents who undergo major surgery experience high rates of disabling acute and chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). However, little is known about the subacute period when acute to chronic pain transition occurs. ⋯ We found it feasible to collect daily pain data in youth recovering at home after major surgery. Pilot findings suggest that daily electronic monitoring may identify early recovery problems at home after surgery. Larger studies are needed to validate subacute pain trajectory features to identify risk for CPSP.
-
Chronic pain is a prevalent health condition associated with parenting difficulties. Pain-specific parenting, such as protectiveness and catastrophizing, may contribute to chronic pain in children. Additional work is needed to test predictors of pain-specific parenting. Aim: The current study tested parent mental health symptoms as predictors of protectiveness and catastrophizing about child pain and whether comorbid pain and mental health symptoms exacerbate risk for problematic responses to children's pain. ⋯ Findings highlight the potential impact of mental health symptoms on pain-specific parenting even when accounting for chronic pain status.