Hatchette Jill E, McGrath Patrick J, Murray Michael, Finley G Allen
Interdisciplinary Research, IWK Health Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3K 6R8, Canada.
BMC Pediatr. 2008 Jan 11;8:2. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-8-2.
Recurrent pain is a common complaint among adolescents. Children learn to resolve or cope with pain largely through family dynamics, particularly maternal influences. By adolescence, young people possess an array of pain behaviors, the culmination of multiple opportunities for modeling and reinforcement of attitudes and beliefs about pain. Adolescence is a time of increased autonomy characterized by, among other complex factors, significant increases in peer influence. Although peers are influential in health-risk behavior, little is known how peers impact adolescents' pain experience. The present study explored the role of peers in adolescents' attitudes toward pain, pain behaviors and over-the-counter analgesics.
Sixty-minute focus groups were conducted with a sample 24 junior high school students from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada (11 male: mean age = 13.45 years, range = 12-15 years; 13 female: mean age = 13.31 years, range = 12-15 years). Participants were randomly assigned to one of five same-gender focus groups designed to explore a wide breadth and depth of information. Sessions were run until theoretical data saturation. Textual data, from transcribed audiotapes, were analyzed with the constant comparative method.
Peer influences were apparent in how adolescents communicate about pain and how those communications effect pain expression. Overt pain responses to injury were primarily contextual and depended on perceived threats to peer-time and pain severity. Adolescents were intolerant of peers' pain behaviors when the cause was perceived as not severe. These attitudes impacted how adolescents responded to their own pain; males were careful not to express embarrassing pain in front of peers, females felt no restrictions on pain talk or pain expression. Evidence for peer influence on attitudes toward OTC analgesics was apparent in perceptions of over-use and ease of access. Findings are discussed within the context of social information-processing and gender role expectations.
Little research has addressed how young people experience pain within the context of the psychosocial influences that dominate during adolescence. The findings provide some insight into the role of peer influences via verbal and non-verbal communication, in adolescents' pain experience. This exploratory study is a necessary first step in understanding the socialization of adolescents' pain experiences.
复发性疼痛是青少年常见的主诉。儿童主要通过家庭动态,尤其是母亲的影响来学习解决或应对疼痛。到了青春期,年轻人会表现出一系列疼痛行为,这是他们多次有机会模仿并强化对疼痛的态度和信念的结果。青春期是自主性增强的时期,其特点包括诸多复杂因素,其中同伴影响显著增加。尽管同伴在健康风险行为方面具有影响力,但对于同伴如何影响青少年的疼痛体验却知之甚少。本研究探讨了同伴在青少年对疼痛的态度、疼痛行为以及非处方镇痛药方面所起的作用。
对来自加拿大新斯科舍省哈利法克斯的24名初中生进行了60分钟的焦点小组访谈(11名男性:平均年龄 = 13.45岁,范围 = 12 - 15岁;13名女性:平均年龄 = 13.31岁,范围 = 12 - 15岁)。参与者被随机分配到五个同性别的焦点小组之一,旨在探索广泛而深入的信息。访谈持续进行直至理论数据饱和。对转录录音带中的文本数据采用持续比较法进行分析。
同伴影响在青少年如何交流疼痛以及这些交流如何影响疼痛表达方面显而易见。对损伤的明显疼痛反应主要取决于具体情境,并取决于对同伴时间的感知威胁和疼痛严重程度。当认为疼痛原因不严重时,青少年对同伴的疼痛行为缺乏容忍度。这些态度影响了青少年对自身疼痛的反应;男性在同伴面前小心不表现出令人尴尬的疼痛,而女性在疼痛交谈或疼痛表达上则没有限制。同伴对非处方镇痛药态度的影响在对过度使用和容易获取的认知中显而易见。研究结果将在社会信息处理和性别角色期望的背景下进行讨论。
很少有研究探讨青少年在青春期占主导地位的心理社会影响背景下如何体验疼痛。研究结果为同伴通过言语和非言语交流在青少年疼痛体验中所起的作用提供了一些见解。这项探索性研究是理解青少年疼痛体验社会化的必要第一步。