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Naturalistic Parental Pain Management During Immunizations over the First Year of Life: Observational Norms from the OUCH Cohort

dc.contributor.authorLisi, Diana
dc.contributor.authorCampbell, Lauren
dc.contributor.authorPillai Riddell, Rebecca
dc.contributor.authorGarfield, Hartley
dc.contributor.authorGreenberg, Saul
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-26T17:11:27Z
dc.date.available2018-03-26T17:11:27Z
dc.date.issued2013
dc.description.abstractNo research to date has descriptively catalogued what parents of healthy infants are naturalistically doing to manage their infant's pain over immunization appointments across the first year of life. This knowledge, in conjunction with an understanding of the relationships different parental techniques have with infant pain-related distress, would be useful when attempting to target parental pain management strategies in the infant immunization context. This study presents descriptive information about the pain management techniques parents have chosen, and examines the relationships these naturalistic techniques have with infant pain-related distress over the first year of life. 760 parent-infant dyads were recruited from three pediatrician clinics in Toronto, Canada, and were naturalistically followed and videotaped longitudinally over four immunization appointments across the infant's first year of life. Infants were full-term, healthy babies. Videotapes were subsequently coded for infant pain-related distress behaviours and parental pain management techniques. After controlling for preceding infant pain-related distress levels, parent pain management techniques accounted for, at most, 13% of the variance in infant pain-related distress scores. Across all age groups, physical comfort, rocking, and verbal reassurance were the most commonly used non-pharmacological pain management techniques. Pacifying and distraction appeared to be most promising in reducing needle-related distress in our sample of healthy infants. Parents in this sample seldom used pharmacological pain management techniques. Given the psychological and physical repercussions involved with unmanaged repetitive acute pain and the paucity of work in healthy infants, this paper highlights key areas for improving parental pain management in primary care.en_US
dc.identifier.citationLisi, D., Campbell, L., Pillai Riddell, R., Greenberg, S. & Garfield, H. (2013). Naturalistic parental pain management during immunizations over the first year of life: Observational norms from the OUCH Cohort. Pain, 154(8), 1245-1253. doi:10.1016/j.pain.2013.03.036
dc.identifier.uridoi: 10.1016/j.pain.2013.03.036en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/34425
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherPainen_US
dc.subjectinfanten_US
dc.subjectpainen_US
dc.subjectpain managementen_US
dc.subjectparenten_US
dc.subjectnon-pharmologicalen_US
dc.subjectlongitudinalen_US
dc.titleNaturalistic Parental Pain Management During Immunizations over the First Year of Life: Observational Norms from the OUCH Cohort
dc.typeArticleen_US

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