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Journal ArticleDOI

Dealing with uncertainty: parental assessment of pain in their children with profound special needs.

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TLDR
A number of themes emerged from the data including learning to live with pain, dealing with uncertainty, expression of pain and making decisions as well as an uncertain and complex process requiring parents to draw on skills and knowledge developed over a number of years.
Abstract
Background. Despite advances in the assessment and management of children's pain, children with profound special needs are especially vulnerable to poor pain management. Their underpinning condition often severely compromises their ability to express pain through the usual verbal and behavioural routes. The lack of any appropriate framework for assessment results in a suboptimum and inaccurate approach to an important aspect of their care. Purpose. The purpose of the study was to explore the ways in which parents of children with profound special needs assess and manage their children's pain. Methods. Qualitative case study design underpinned the study using guided interviews with the 15 parents/carers (of 12 children aged 5–16 years with profound special needs). Ethical approval. Ethics Committee approval was gained. Findings. A number of themes emerged from the data including learning to live with pain, dealing with uncertainty, expression of pain and making decisions. Conclusions. Parents felt that their child had learned to live with significant levels of chronic and acute pain. Assessment of pain was an uncertain and complex process requiring parents to draw on skills and knowledge developed over a number of years. Parents used different strategies for both the assessment and management of pain based on an intimate knowledge of their child's usual nonpain state. Even with a limited repertoire of behaviours available to them, children were able to express pain. Parents often felt isolated in relation to pain management and under-used as a resource by health professionals.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Parents’ experiences of pain and discomfort in people with learning disabilities

TL;DR: The parents did not often perceive their son or daughter to be in pain or discomfort, which was an unexpected finding given the sampling strategy, which represents the first stage of research into a previously unexplored area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parents’ experience of pain in children with cerebral palsy and multiple disabilities – An interview study

TL;DR: The results indicate that both long-lasting pain and acute post-operative pain among these children were not sufficiently cared for and a multidisciplinary team specialized in receiving and treating patients in pain is required to provide optimal care and treatment of these children and their families.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pain in Children With Developmental Disabilities: Development and Preliminary Effectiveness of a Pain Training Workshop for Respite Workers.

TL;DR: Training can positively impact respite workers’ knowledge and perceptions about pain assessment and management, and they may be better equipped to care for children with ID in this area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fasting in paediatric ambulatory surgery.

TL;DR: In this article, a descriptive study was conducted to examine how preoperative fasting and postoperative termination of the fast was experienced in ambulatory surgery by child patients and their mothers, and the most evident result of the study was that parents need more information before their child's operation.

Pain in Children with Cerebral Palsy

Karen Sauve
TL;DR: A brief overview of the literature regarding the prevalence, causes and implications of chronic pain in children and adolescents with cerebral palsy can be found in this paper, where a review of commonly used outcome measures in the assessment of pain in this population and suggested management options.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: In this article, an intensive study of case study research methods is presented, focusing on the Unique Case Research Questions and the Nature of Qualitative Research Data Gathering Analysis and Interpretation Case Researcher Roles Triangulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Participatory Inquiry Paradigm

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Journal ArticleDOI

A new analogue scale for assessing children's pain: an initial validation study

TL;DR: The CAS has fulfilled the first two criteria for a pain measure (psychophysical properties and discriminant validity), it is ethical to proceed with the formal definitive test for construct validity, in which children from various clinical populations use the CAS scale to assess their own pain.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, a presentation of heuristics as an approach to human science research is presented, and a fresh perspective for the understanding and application of a heuristic approach to scientific investigation is presented.
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