Acta paediatrica
-
The accurate assessment of pain in children constitutes a challenge for health professionals and, in the case of young children, parents are generally the main source of information. The objective of this study was to validate and to compare three pain scales in preschool children and their parents. A total of 104 children between 4 and 6 y of age and their parents participated in the study while undergoing an immunization procedure in the outpatient department of a tertiary pediatric care hospital. ⋯ Parents tended to underestimate their child's pain when using HPCT or MSPCT. It seems that both HPCT and MSPCT measure a similar dimension of pain, whereas the FAS addresses a different aspect of pain. Although parents play an important role in their child's pain assessment, they tend to underestimate the intensity of pain when using HPCT or MSPCT.
-
The aims of the study are to analyse Swedish trends in overweight and obesity-as measured by body mass index (BMI)-between 1971 and 1995, and to examine socioeconomic and geographic differences between groups of individuals on the basis of information on 18-y-old military conscripts. The study population comprises all males born in 1953, 1958, 1963, 1968, and between 1973 and 1977, reported to be living in Sweden at 17 y of age according to nationwide population registers (RTPs). Utilizing the unique personal ID number, sociodemographic data in the RTPs and in Population and Housing censuses were linked to data on BMI in the national Military Service Conscription Registry for the years 1971 to 1995. ⋯ The prevalence of overweight was also found to be higher in both 1971 and 1995 among young men from rural and/or sparsely populated areas than among those living in Sweden's largest cities. Mean BMI, and the prevalence of overweight and obesity have increased among 18-y-old males in Sweden over the last 24 y. The increased risk of overweight among young men from low-educated families and those from rural and/or sparsely populated areas detected in 1971 was still evident in 1995.