Kim Yoonhee Kristina, Ma Ryan S, Bhandari Rashmi P
Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Children (Basel). 2025 Jun 7;12(6):742. doi: 10.3390/children12060742.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Despite the striking prevalence of pediatric chronic pain (20% of youth), its impact on culturally diverse populations, particularly Asian families, remains underexplored. The existing literature on parent protective behaviors predominantly focuses on Non-Hispanic White (NHW) families, where such behaviors often exacerbate pain outcomes, therefore informing a core treatment target in clinical practice. This study aims to explore the role of parent protective behaviors in relation to global and pain-related distress in Asian families in comparison to NHW counterparts.
A sample of 1415 youth (Asian: n = 236; NHW: n = 1179) aged 8 to 17 completed a survey prior to their evaluation at a tertiary pain clinic. Bivariate correlations and independent-sample -tests were conducted to assess differences in anxiety, depression, pain-related distress, and parent protective behaviors between groups. Multiple regression analyses were used to determine whether parent protective behaviors moderated the relationship between global distress and pain-related outcomes.
Asian youth reported significantly lower pain intensity and pain interference than NHW youth, while Asian parents reported significantly higher protective behaviors. Parent protective behaviors moderated the association between global distress (depression and anxiety) and pain catastrophizing for Asian families only. A three-way interaction (ethnicity x parent protective behaviors, global distress, B = -0.22, < 0.001; B = -0.18, < 0.01) revealed that protective behaviors influenced the distress-pain catastrophizing link differently by ethnicity.
Differences were observed in the Asian youth's experience of pain in comparison to their NHW counterparts. This study highlights the importance of considering culturally nuanced approaches in treating pediatric chronic pain, particularly when working with Asian families.
背景/目的:尽管儿童慢性疼痛的患病率惊人(占青少年的20%),但其对文化多元群体,尤其是亚裔家庭的影响仍未得到充分研究。现有的关于父母保护行为的文献主要集中在非西班牙裔白人(NHW)家庭,在这些家庭中,此类行为往往会加剧疼痛结果,因此为临床实践中的一个核心治疗目标提供了依据。本研究旨在探讨与NHW家庭相比,父母保护行为在亚裔家庭中与整体痛苦及疼痛相关痛苦之间的关系。
1415名年龄在8至17岁的青少年(亚裔:n = 236;NHW:n = 1179)在三级疼痛诊所进行评估之前完成了一项调查。进行双变量相关性分析和独立样本检验,以评估两组之间在焦虑、抑郁、疼痛相关痛苦和父母保护行为方面的差异。使用多元回归分析来确定父母保护行为是否调节了整体痛苦与疼痛相关结果之间的关系。
亚裔青少年报告的疼痛强度和疼痛干扰明显低于NHW青少年,而亚裔父母报告的保护行为明显更高。父母保护行为仅调节了亚裔家庭中整体痛苦(抑郁和焦虑)与疼痛灾难化之间的关联。一个三向交互作用(种族×父母保护行为,整体痛苦,B = -0.22,P < 0.001;B = -0.18,P < 0.01)表明,保护行为对痛苦-疼痛灾难化联系的影响因种族而异。
与NHW青少年相比,亚裔青少年在疼痛体验上存在差异。本研究强调了在治疗儿童慢性疼痛时考虑文化细微差异方法的重要性,尤其是在与亚裔家庭合作时。