Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Children's Hospital Boston, and Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Clin J Pain. 2010 May;26(4):291-9. doi: 10.1097/AJP.0b013e3181cf59fb.
To examine the adherence to the recommendations of pain treatment among children and adolescents evaluated for a variety of chronic and recurrent pain conditions.
Several measures during initial evaluation and after 3 months were collected to assess satisfaction with initial evaluation, adherence to multidisciplinary recommendations, pain ratings, somatic symptoms, functional limitations, and school attendance.
Of the 120 patients who initially enrolled in the study, 70 parents and 57 children participated in 3-month follow-up interviews and reported significantly fewer doctor visits, decreased somatic symptoms, fewer functional limitations, and decreased pain compared with their initial evaluation. Adherence to multidisciplinary recommendations ranged from 46.7% to 100% with the highest level of overall adherence to physical therapy. Factors associated with adherence varied across type of recommendation. For medical recommendations, higher parent-reported patient satisfaction and expectations that medical tests would be beneficial were associated with engagement in medical treatment, whereas parent reports of negative attitude-type barriers and experience with surgery were associated with less frequent engagement in recommended treatment. With regard to physical therapy recommendations, only earlier experience with exercise was associated with better adherence. For psychologic recommendations, familiarity with hypnosis and biofeedback in addition to positive expectations regarding psychologic treatment and biofeedback were all associated with subsequent engagement in psychologic treatment. Lastly, we identified modest associations between functional improvements and adherence to specific recommendations.
Results of this study support the importance of examining adherence to multidisciplinary interventions among children and adolescents with chronic pain.
考察评估各种慢性和复发性疼痛疾病的儿童和青少年对疼痛治疗建议的遵循情况。
在初始评估和 3 个月后收集了多项措施,以评估对初始评估的满意度、对多学科建议的遵循情况、疼痛评分、躯体症状、功能限制和上学出勤率。
在最初入组研究的 120 名患者中,有 70 名家长和 57 名儿童参加了 3 个月的随访访谈,与初始评估相比,他们的就诊次数明显减少,躯体症状减轻,功能限制减少,疼痛减轻。多学科建议的遵循率从 46.7%到 100%不等,整体上对物理治疗的遵循程度最高。与建议的遵循相关的因素因建议类型而异。对于医疗建议,家长报告的患者满意度较高,以及对医疗检查有益的期望与接受医疗治疗有关,而家长报告的负面态度型障碍和手术经验与较少接受推荐治疗有关。关于物理治疗建议,只有更早的锻炼经验与更好的依从性相关。对于心理建议,除了对心理治疗和生物反馈的积极期望外,对催眠和生物反馈的熟悉程度也与随后接受心理治疗有关。最后,我们发现功能改善与对特定建议的遵循之间存在适度的关联。
这项研究的结果支持检查慢性疼痛儿童和青少年多学科干预措施的遵循情况的重要性。