Pain Reporting And Analgesia Management In 270 Children With A Progressive Neurologic, Metabolic Or Chromosomally Based Condition With Impairment Of The Central Nervous System: Cross-sectional, Baseline Results From An Observational, Longitudinal Study

Title

Pain Reporting And Analgesia Management In 270 Children With A Progressive Neurologic, Metabolic Or Chromosomally Based Condition With Impairment Of The Central Nervous System: Cross-sectional, Baseline Results From An Observational, Longitudinal Study

Creator

Friedrichsdorf SJ; Postier A; Andrews GS; Hamre K E; Steele R; Siden H

Identifier

Publisher

Journal Of Pain Research

Date

2017

Subject

Hospice; Life-limiting; Neuropathic Pain; Palliative; Pediatric Palliative Care

Description

Little is known about the prevalence, characterization and treatment of pain in children with progressive neurologic, metabolic or chromosomal conditions with impairment of the central nervous system. The primary aims of this study were to explore the differences between parental and clinical pain reporting in children with life-limiting conditions at the time of enrollment into an observational, longitudinal study and to determine if differences in pain experiences were associated with patient- or treatment-related factors. Pain was common, under-recognized and undertreated among the 270 children who enrolled into the "Charting the Territory" study. Children identified by their parents as experiencing pain (n=149, 55%) were older, had more comorbidities such as dyspnea/feeding difficulties, were less mobile with lower functional skills and used analgesic medications more often, compared to pain-free children. Forty-one percent of children with parent-reported pain (21.8% of all patients) experienced pain most of the time. The majority of clinicians (60%) did not document pain assessment or analgesic treatment in the medical records of patients who were experiencing pain. Documentation of pain in the medical record was positively correlated with children receiving palliative care services and being prescribed analgesics, such as acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and opioids, as well as the adjuvant analgesics gabapentin and amitriptyline.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

October 2017 List

Notes

Friedrichsdorf, Stefan J
Postier, Andrea C
Andrews, Gail S
Hamre, Karen Es
Steele, Rose
Siden, Harold
Journal Article
New Zealand
J Pain Res. 2017 Jul 31;10:1841-1852. doi: 10.2147/JPR.S138153. eCollection 2017.

Citation

Friedrichsdorf SJ; Postier A; Andrews GS; Hamre K E; Steele R; Siden H, “Pain Reporting And Analgesia Management In 270 Children With A Progressive Neurologic, Metabolic Or Chromosomally Based Condition With Impairment Of The Central Nervous System: Cross-sectional, Baseline Results From An Observational, Longitudinal Study,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 23, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/10800.