Journal of pain and symptom management
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Pain in children from the neonate to the teenager has recently begun to achieve the attention it deserves in the medical literature. Practitioners have been slow to apply both old and new techniques in this patient population. This review focuses on the perioperative management of pain and its associated symptoms in pediatric patients.
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Much recent attention has focused on the development and refinement of pain measures, as well as on the use of more effective pain control methods for infants, children, and adolescents. This article reviews the primary categories of pediatric pain measures, with a specific focus on the selection of the most appropriate behavioral, physiologic, or subjective method for assessing a child's pain. The optimum pain measure depends on the age and cognitive level of a child, the type of pain experienced, and the situation in which the pain occurs. While no single measure is adequate for all children for all types of acute, recurrent, and chronic pain, it is possible to choose practical, valid, and reliable methods for evaluating any child's pain experience.
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Pain in neonates has only recently become the focus of clinical and research attention. Measurement of pain in this population presents special problems. ⋯ Nurses used similar classes of behavior to indicate pain, but varied somewhat in the specific behavioral indicators for different levels of pain. A very wide range of sources of pain was identified.