Racine Nicole M, Pillai Riddell Rebecca R, Flora David B, Taddio Anna, Garfield Hartley, Greenberg Saul
Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Pain. 2016 Sep;157(9):1918-1932. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000590.
Anticipatory distress prior to a painful medical procedure can lead to negative sequelae including heightened pain experiences, avoidance of future medical procedures, and potential noncompliance with preventative health care, such as vaccinations. Few studies have examined the longitudinal and concurrent predictors of pain-related anticipatory distress. This article consists of 2 companion studies to examine both the longitudinal factors from infancy as well as concurrent factors from preschool that predict pain-related anticipatory distress at the preschool age. Study 1 examined how well preschool pain-related anticipatory distress was predicted by infant pain response at 2, 4, 6, and 12 months of age. In study 2, using a developmental psychopathology framework, longitudinal analyses examined the predisposing, precipitating, perpetuating, and present factors that led to the development of anticipatory distress during routine preschool vaccinations. A sample of 202 caregiver-child dyads was observed during their infant and preschool vaccinations (the Opportunities to Understand Childhood Hurt cohort) and was used for both studies. In study 1, pain response during infancy was not found to significantly predict pain-related anticipatory distress at preschool. In study 2, a strong explanatory model was created whereby 40% of the variance in preschool anticipatory distress was explained. Parental behaviours from infancy and preschool were the strongest predictors of child anticipatory distress at preschool. Child age positively predicted child anticipatory distress. This strongly suggests that the involvement of parents in pain management interventions during immunization is one of the most critical factors in predicting anticipatory distress to the preschool vaccination.
在痛苦的医疗程序之前出现的预期性痛苦可能会导致负面后果,包括疼痛体验加剧、避免未来的医疗程序以及可能不遵守预防性医疗保健措施,如疫苗接种。很少有研究探讨与疼痛相关的预期性痛苦的纵向和同时期预测因素。本文由两项配套研究组成,旨在研究从婴儿期的纵向因素以及学龄前的同时期因素,这些因素可预测学龄前与疼痛相关的预期性痛苦。研究1考察了2个月、4个月、6个月和12个月大时的婴儿疼痛反应对学龄前与疼痛相关的预期性痛苦的预测程度。在研究2中,运用发展心理病理学框架,纵向分析了导致在常规学龄前疫苗接种期间预期性痛苦发展的易感、促发、持续和当前因素。在婴儿和学龄前疫苗接种期间观察了202对照顾者-儿童二元组样本(了解儿童伤害机会队列),两项研究均使用了该样本。在研究1中,未发现婴儿期的疼痛反应能显著预测学龄前与疼痛相关的预期性痛苦。在研究2中,构建了一个强大的解释模型,该模型解释了学龄前预期性痛苦中40%的方差。婴儿期和学龄前父母的行为是学龄前儿童预期性痛苦的最强预测因素。儿童年龄对儿童预期性痛苦有正向预测作用。这有力地表明,父母参与免疫期间的疼痛管理干预是预测学龄前疫苗接种预期性痛苦的最关键因素之一。