Litcius/Paper detail

Parent Responses to Their Child's Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Measures

Lauren E. Harrison, Inge Timmers, Lauren C. Heathcote, Emma Fisher, Vivek Tanna, Tom Duarte Silva Bans, Laura E. Simons

2020Journal of Pediatric Psychology24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Parent responses can have a major impact on their child's pain. The purpose of this systematic review is to (a) identify and describe measures assessing pain-related cognitive, affective, and behavioral responses in parents of children with chronic pain and (b) meta-analyze reported correlations between parent constructs and child outcomes (i.e., pain intensity, functional disability, and school functioning). Prospero protocol registration ID: CRD42019125496. METHODS: We conducted a systematic search of studies including a measure of parent/caregiver responses to their child's chronic pain. Study characteristics and correlations between parent measures and child outcomes were extracted. Data were summarized and meta-analyzed. RESULTS: Seventy-nine met inclusion criteria using 18 different measures of cognitive/affective (n = 3), behavioral (n = 5), and multidimensional responses (n = 10). Measures were used a median of three times (range 1-48), predominantly completed by mothers (88%), and primarily in mixed pain samples. Psychometrics of measures were generally adequate. Meta-analyses were based on 42 papers across five measures. Results showed that each of the cognitive, affective, and behavioral parent constructs we examined was significantly associated with pain-related functional disability. A small number of measures assessing parent cognitions and affective functioning were associated with higher child pain intensity; however, the majority were not. CONCLUSION: Findings demonstrate that there is a wealth of measures available, with adequate reliability overall but a lack of psychometrics on temporal stability. Synthesizing data across studies revealed small effects between parent responses and child functioning, and even smaller and/or absent effects on child pain intensity.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionMeta-analysisPsychologyClinical psychologyPsychometricsChronic painSystematic reviewMEDLINEPsychiatryMedicineInternal medicinePolitical scienceLawPediatric Pain Management TechniquesMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life