Effective communication with children about pain is important and has the potential to mediate the short- and longer-term effects of pain on children. Most communication studies relating to children's pain have focused on language children use to describe everyday pain experiences. However, little is known regarding how health professionals, particularly nurses, communicate with children in healthcare settings about pain. This study aimed to explore how nurses talk to children and their parents about pain and what factors influence nurses' use of language and non-verbal communication. A cross-sectional mixed-methods (predominantly qualitative) survey ("pain talk") was conducted, comprising qualitative items about pain communication and four vignettes portraying hypothetical cases of children representing typical child pain scenarios. Participants were recruited via email, social media, newsletters, established networks, and personal contacts. A total of 141 registered (68.1%) or in-training nurses across 11 countries with experience of managing children's pain completed the survey. Textual survey responses were analyzed using conventional qualitative content analysis. Qualitative content analysis generated a meta-theme "Being confident and knowing how to do 'pain talk'" and four main themes that described the functions, purpose, and delivery of "pain talk": (a) "contextualizing and assessing," (b) "empowering, explaining, and educating," (c) "supporting, affirming, and confirming," and (d) "protecting, distracting, and restoring." "Pain talk" was a triadic collaborative communication process that required nurses to feel confident about their role and skills. This process involved nurses talking to children and parents about pain and creating engagement opportunities for children and parents. "Pain talk" aimed to promote the agency of the child and parent and their engagement in discussions and decision-making, using information, support, and comfort. Nurses shaped their "pain talk" to the specific context of the child's pain, previous experiences, and current concerns to minimize potential distress and adverse effects and to promote optimal pain management.
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Effective communication with children about pain is important and has the potential to mediate the short- and longer-term effects of pain on children. Most communication studies relating to children's pain have focused on language children use to describe everyday pain experiences. However, little is known regarding how health professionals, particularly nurses, communicate with children in healthcare settings about pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
November 2021
Department of Human Development & Family Studies, College of Health and Human Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States of America.
Rationale: Implicit racial bias affects many human interactions including patient-physician encounters. Its impact, however, varies between studies. We assessed the effects of physician implicit, racial bias on their management of cancer-related pain using a randomized field experiment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Health Psychol
May 2021
Department of Health Psychology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Objectives: Partner's responses to pain behaviours play a pivotal role in the patient's adjustment. This study aims to further our knowledge regarding patients' and partners' interpretation of partners' responses to pain behaviours, and the possible discrepancies between patients' and partners' perceptions. Further, this study examines patients' preferred responses to pain behaviours and possible discrepancies between received and preferred responses to pain behaviours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Palliat Care
August 2020
School of Translation Studies/Center for Medical Humanities in the Developing World, Qufu Normal University, No.5, Yantai Road, Donggang District, Rizhao, 250100, Shandong, China.
Background: A large number of the hospice patients have been reported to be with symptoms of pain. Thus, managing the patient's pain is one aspect of hospice care provision. The delivery of pain care services could be facilitated through effective communication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Sci Med
October 2018
School of Pharmacy, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading, RG6 6AW, UK. Electronic address:
Drawing on the notion of gender as a socially constructed category performed inter alia through language, this study examines the ways in which women and man use language to do person-in-pain in real-life interactions about chronic and terminal illness. It is based on a secondary analysis of a large corpus of health and illness narratives collected by the Health Experiences Research Group at the University of Oxford and published by the DIPEx charity. Sixteen chronic and terminal conditions were identified in which men and women talked about physical pain and their narratives examined using the linguistic approach of a corpus-assisted discourse analysis.
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