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Pediatrician explanations of pediatric pain in clinical settings: A delicate craft

Pediatrician explanations of pediatric pain in clinical settings: A delicate craft
Pediatrician explanations of pediatric pain in clinical settings: A delicate craft
Explaining chronic pain to children and families can be challenging, particularly in the absence of an obvious physiologically identifiable cause for the child's pain. In addition to medical intervention, children and families may expect clinicians to provide clarity around the cause of pain. Such explanations are often provided by clinicians who have not received formal pain training. This qualitative study sought to explore the following question: What do pediatricians consider to be important when providing pain explanations to children and their parents? Using semistructured interview methods, 16 UK pediatricians were interviewed regarding their perceptions of explaining chronic pain to children and families in clinical settings. Data were analyzed using inductive reflexive thematic analysis. Analyses generated 3 themes: 1) timing of the explanation, 2) casting a wider net, and 3) tailoring of the narrative. Study findings demonstrated the need for pediatricians to skilfully interpret where children and families are in their pain journey and deliver an appropriate and adaptable explanation relating to individual needs. Analyses identified the importance of providing a pain explanation that could be repeated and understood by others outside the consultation room, to enable children and families to accept the explanation. PERSPECTIVE: Study findings identify the importance of language in addition to familial and broader factors that may influence the provision and adoption of chronic pain explanations provided by pediatricians to children and families. Improving pain explanation provision may influence treatment engagement for children and their parents, subsequently impacting pain related outcomes.
Explanations, children, clinicians, communication, pediatric pain
1526-5900
1396-1405
Jordan, Abbie
3dd9c721-9bd1-4551-ad7c-75ecc11ef336
Williams, Myfanwy
bef71668-4195-4c41-88e4-56f6bfd65d0c
Jones, Abigail
c594df87-bf6f-42d2-a6bf-35e5c65760dd
Noel, Melanie
2140814f-fda0-4f1f-8c40-3d619af10bfa
Neville, A.
49e738dd-af62-4eff-b2f0-ea1826122668
Clinch, Jacqueline
3b086cbd-77aa-4687-86dc-aa996d134fc4
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Gauntlett-Gilbert, Jeremy
380c0f6a-191e-43de-bcf8-3e37d9f5e4eb
Leake, Hayley
03e2fcd5-2c7a-4d58-bd20-aeb136b617a8
Jordan, Abbie
3dd9c721-9bd1-4551-ad7c-75ecc11ef336
Williams, Myfanwy
bef71668-4195-4c41-88e4-56f6bfd65d0c
Jones, Abigail
c594df87-bf6f-42d2-a6bf-35e5c65760dd
Noel, Melanie
2140814f-fda0-4f1f-8c40-3d619af10bfa
Neville, A.
49e738dd-af62-4eff-b2f0-ea1826122668
Clinch, Jacqueline
3b086cbd-77aa-4687-86dc-aa996d134fc4
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Gauntlett-Gilbert, Jeremy
380c0f6a-191e-43de-bcf8-3e37d9f5e4eb
Leake, Hayley
03e2fcd5-2c7a-4d58-bd20-aeb136b617a8

Jordan, Abbie, Williams, Myfanwy, Jones, Abigail, Noel, Melanie, Neville, A., Clinch, Jacqueline, Pincus, Tamar, Gauntlett-Gilbert, Jeremy and Leake, Hayley (2023) Pediatrician explanations of pediatric pain in clinical settings: A delicate craft. Journal of Pain, 24 (8), 1396-1405. (doi:10.1016/j.jpain.2023.03.002).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Explaining chronic pain to children and families can be challenging, particularly in the absence of an obvious physiologically identifiable cause for the child's pain. In addition to medical intervention, children and families may expect clinicians to provide clarity around the cause of pain. Such explanations are often provided by clinicians who have not received formal pain training. This qualitative study sought to explore the following question: What do pediatricians consider to be important when providing pain explanations to children and their parents? Using semistructured interview methods, 16 UK pediatricians were interviewed regarding their perceptions of explaining chronic pain to children and families in clinical settings. Data were analyzed using inductive reflexive thematic analysis. Analyses generated 3 themes: 1) timing of the explanation, 2) casting a wider net, and 3) tailoring of the narrative. Study findings demonstrated the need for pediatricians to skilfully interpret where children and families are in their pain journey and deliver an appropriate and adaptable explanation relating to individual needs. Analyses identified the importance of providing a pain explanation that could be repeated and understood by others outside the consultation room, to enable children and families to accept the explanation. PERSPECTIVE: Study findings identify the importance of language in addition to familial and broader factors that may influence the provision and adoption of chronic pain explanations provided by pediatricians to children and families. Improving pain explanation provision may influence treatment engagement for children and their parents, subsequently impacting pain related outcomes.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 March 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 March 2023
Published date: August 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was supported by charitable funding from the Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust (no specific grant number). Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors
Keywords: Explanations, children, clinicians, communication, pediatric pain

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476827
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476827
ISSN: 1526-5900
PURE UUID: 427f945f-ec2e-4e6e-ba09-5b30bc309a7c
ORCID for Tamar Pincus: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3172-5624

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 May 2023 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:11

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Contributors

Author: Abbie Jordan
Author: Myfanwy Williams
Author: Abigail Jones
Author: Melanie Noel
Author: A. Neville
Author: Jacqueline Clinch
Author: Tamar Pincus ORCID iD
Author: Jeremy Gauntlett-Gilbert
Author: Hayley Leake

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