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“You just want someone to help”: outcomes that matter to parents when their child is treated for chronic pain

“You just want someone to help”: outcomes that matter to parents when their child is treated for chronic pain
“You just want someone to help”: outcomes that matter to parents when their child is treated for chronic pain
In children's chronic pain services, healthcare decisions involve a three-way interaction between the child, their parent or guardian, and the health professional. Parents have unique needs, and it is unknown how they visualize their child's recovery and which outcomes they perceive to be an indication of their child's progress. This qualitative study explored the outcomes parents considered important, when their child was undergoing treatment for chronic pain. A purposive sample of twenty-one parents of children receiving treatment for chronic musculoskeletal pain, completed a one-off semi-structured interview that involved drawing a timeline of their child's treatment. The interview and timeline content were analyzed using thematic analysis. Four themes are evident at different points of the child's treatment course. The “perfect storm” that described their child's pain starting, “fighting in the dark” was a stage when parents focused on finding a service or health professional that could solve their child's pain. The third stage, “drawing a line under it,” changed the outcomes parents considered important, parents changed how they approached their child's pain and worked alongside professionals, focusing on their child's happiness and engagement with life. They watched their child make positive change and moved toward the final theme “free.” The outcomes parents considered important changed over their child's treatment course. The shift described by parents during treatment appeared pivotal to the recovery of young people, demonstrating the importance of the role of parents within chronic pain treatment.
2637-3807
38-48
Joslin, Rhiannon
2724bff5-4248-43db-b2d5-47bc10c1033e
Donovan‐hall, Maggie
052d3b83-5d92-46c4-82b2-05d5deab5999
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Joslin, Rhiannon
2724bff5-4248-43db-b2d5-47bc10c1033e
Donovan‐hall, Maggie
052d3b83-5d92-46c4-82b2-05d5deab5999
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0

Joslin, Rhiannon, Donovan‐hall, Maggie and Roberts, Lisa (2023) “You just want someone to help”: outcomes that matter to parents when their child is treated for chronic pain. Paediatric and Neonatal Pain, 5 (2), 38-48. (doi:10.1002/pne2.12098).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In children's chronic pain services, healthcare decisions involve a three-way interaction between the child, their parent or guardian, and the health professional. Parents have unique needs, and it is unknown how they visualize their child's recovery and which outcomes they perceive to be an indication of their child's progress. This qualitative study explored the outcomes parents considered important, when their child was undergoing treatment for chronic pain. A purposive sample of twenty-one parents of children receiving treatment for chronic musculoskeletal pain, completed a one-off semi-structured interview that involved drawing a timeline of their child's treatment. The interview and timeline content were analyzed using thematic analysis. Four themes are evident at different points of the child's treatment course. The “perfect storm” that described their child's pain starting, “fighting in the dark” was a stage when parents focused on finding a service or health professional that could solve their child's pain. The third stage, “drawing a line under it,” changed the outcomes parents considered important, parents changed how they approached their child's pain and worked alongside professionals, focusing on their child's happiness and engagement with life. They watched their child make positive change and moved toward the final theme “free.” The outcomes parents considered important changed over their child's treatment course. The shift described by parents during treatment appeared pivotal to the recovery of young people, demonstrating the importance of the role of parents within chronic pain treatment.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 February 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 March 2023
Published date: June 2023
Additional Information: © 2023 The Authors. Paediatric and Neonatal Pain published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476713
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476713
ISSN: 2637-3807
PURE UUID: 8a81cd42-4d27-40f2-89d0-694ae765332e
ORCID for Rhiannon Joslin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3712-3341
ORCID for Lisa Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2662-6696

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 May 2023 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17

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Contributors

Author: Rhiannon Joslin ORCID iD
Author: Maggie Donovan‐hall
Author: Lisa Roberts ORCID iD

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