Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine.
J Pediatr Psychol. 2018 Apr 1;43(3):303-313. doi: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsx118.
The current study focuses on social risk and resilience in an adolescent population with chronic pain. Prior research identifies parental cognitions and behaviors as influential in youths' experiences of chronic pain and pain-related disability. Adolescent development is characterized by greater autonomy from parents and an increased emphasis on peer relationships. Study aims explore the potential protective effect of high-quality adolescent peer relationships on associations between parent and adolescent cognitive and behavioral responses to pain.
238 adolescents with mixed-etiology chronic pain and their parents completed Pediatric Collaborative Health Outcomes Information Registry (Peds-CHOIR) electronic questionnaires prior to their initial visit to a tertiary pediatric pain clinic. Variables in this study include parent catastrophizing, parent protective behavior, adolescent peer relationship quality, adolescent catastrophizing, adolescent functional impairment, and demographic and pain characteristics.
As expected, associations between parent and adolescent cognitive and behavioral pain responses were moderated by peer relationship quality. Contrary to expectations, for adolescents endorsing low-quality peer relationships, maladaptive adolescent outcomes were elevated across levels of parental cognitions and behaviors. For adolescents endorsing high-quality peer relationships, adolescent and parent pain responses were linearly related.
This study highlights the salience of both family and peer processes in functional outcomes among adolescents with chronic pain. Results suggest that adolescents' adaptive responses to chronic pain may be best supported by the simultaneous presence of adaptive parenting and high-quality peer relationships. Understanding the larger social context in which an adolescent exists is informative in specifying models that predict adaptive outcomes or magnify risks.
本研究关注慢性疼痛青少年人群的社会风险和适应力。既往研究表明,父母的认知和行为对青少年的慢性疼痛体验和与疼痛相关的残疾有影响。青少年的发展特点是与父母的自主性增强,对同伴关系的重视度增加。本研究旨在探讨高质量的青少年同伴关系对父母和青少年对疼痛的认知和行为反应之间的关联的潜在保护作用。
238 名患有混合病因慢性疼痛的青少年及其父母在首次就诊于三级儿科疼痛诊所前,完成了儿科合作健康结果信息注册(Peds-CHOIR)电子问卷。本研究的变量包括父母的灾难化思维、父母的保护行为、青少年同伴关系质量、青少年的灾难化思维、青少年的功能障碍以及人口统计学和疼痛特征。
正如预期的那样,父母和青少年的认知和行为疼痛反应之间的关联受到同伴关系质量的调节。与预期相反,对于认同低质量同伴关系的青少年,在父母认知和行为的各个水平上,不良的青少年结局都有所增加。对于认同高质量同伴关系的青少年,青少年和父母的疼痛反应呈线性相关。
本研究强调了家庭和同伴过程在慢性疼痛青少年功能结局中的重要性。研究结果表明,青少年对慢性疼痛的适应性反应可能最好通过适应性父母养育和高质量的同伴关系同时存在来支持。了解青少年所处的更大社会环境有助于明确预测适应性结局或放大风险的模型。