Publications by authors named "C Lamontagne"

Article Synopsis
  • - Interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain programs are essential for treating complex youth with chronic pain, but nurses currently lack evidence-based support to guide their triage decisions, leading to potentially inefficient outcomes.
  • - A qualitative study involving 12 nurses from different programs explored their decision-making practices and identified key themes: determinants influencing triage, the triage decision-making process, and external factors affecting these decisions.
  • - The results underscore the complexity of nursing roles in triage and highlight the nurses' interest in implementing an evidence-based clinical decision support tool to improve the triage process and prioritize patients in need of interdisciplinary care.
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Pediatric chronic pain is a complex experience that is often challenging to describe and measure. Multidimensional tools that evaluate the biopsychosocial impact of chronic pain in pediatric patients can help clinicians to prioritize and tailor interdisciplinary pain care; yet, the psychometric value and clinical utility of such tools has not yet been systematically studied in the literature. The purpose of this review was to identify multidimensional biopsychosocial tools used in pediatric chronic pain, synthesize their reliability and validity evidence, and draw on this evidence to describe the relationships between chronic pain and biopsychosocial domains.

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The role of the environment in the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is being increasingly recognized, raising questions about the public health risks associated with environmental AMR. Yet, little is known about pathogenicity among resistant bacteria in environmental systems. Existing studies on the association between AMR and virulence are contradictory, as fitness costs and genetic co-occurrence can be opposing influences.

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Purpose: Pain catastrophizing (PC) is the tendency to magnify the threat value of pain sensations and is associated with greater postsurgical pain intensity, functional disability, and pain chronicity. Higher parental PC predicts higher chronic postsurgical pain in youth. Treating PC in caregivers and youth prior to surgery may improve recovery and surgical outcomes.

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