Parental anxiety and catastrophizing in pediatric tonsillectomy pain control: A multivariate analysis

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q3 OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY International journal of pediatric otorhinolaryngology Pub Date : 2025-01-31 DOI:10.1016/j.ijporl.2025.112244
Ben B. Levy , Jennifer M. Siu , Brittany N. Rosenbloom , Melanie Noel , Tanya Chen , Nikolaus E. Wolter
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Abstract

Objective

Parental anxiety and/or catastrophizing may bias the interpretation of children's pain and administration of analgesia post-tonsillectomy. We aimed to determine whether high levels of parental anxiety and/or catastrophizing impact child pain intensity interpretation and administration of analgesia.

Methods

Child-parent dyads were recruited from a tertiary care institution between July 2017–December 2019. Preoperative parental anxiety and catastrophizing were assessed using self-report measures. Postoperative data on child and parent pain intensity, as well as analgesia use, were collected up to 2 weeks post-surgery. Multivariable logistic regression models were created to assess predictors of postoperative child pain intensity and analgesia use.

Results

Our cohort included 234 child-parent dyads. Median child age was 5 years (IQR, 4–6), and 9.0 % of children (n = 21) had a medical comorbidity. Both child- and parent-reported pain intensity were highest on postoperative day 2 (3.65 [SD = 3.08] and 3.67 [SD = 2.51], respectively). Parental catastrophizing did not predict analgesia use at home, although a minimal significant decrease in the odds of analgesia administration was observed on postoperative day 7 (OR 0.932, p = 0.017). Maximal parental anxiety did not predict higher odds of increased child postoperative pain intensity on any postoperative day.

Conclusion

Parental catastrophizing prior to tonsillectomy has minimal predictive value for analgesia use postoperatively. Children may be successfully advocating for their own pain control as parental anxiety and catastrophizing do not appear to be unduly influencing analgesia administration. Future studies should explore the impact of parental anxiety on vulnerable pediatric populations who may be unable to self-advocate for pain management.
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儿童扁桃体切除疼痛控制中的父母焦虑和灾难化:一项多变量分析。
目的:父母的焦虑和/或灾难化可能会影响对儿童扁桃体切除术后疼痛的解释和镇痛的管理。我们的目的是确定高水平的父母焦虑和/或灾难化是否影响儿童疼痛强度的解释和镇痛的管理。方法:在2017年7月至2019年12月期间从一家三级医疗机构招募了亲子二人组。术前父母焦虑和灾难化采用自我报告方法进行评估。术后2周收集患儿和家长的疼痛强度以及镇痛药的使用数据。建立多变量logistic回归模型来评估术后儿童疼痛强度和止痛药使用的预测因素。结果:我们的队列包括234对亲子对。中位儿童年龄为5岁(IQR, 4-6), 9.0%的儿童(n = 21)有医学合并症。患儿和家长报告的疼痛强度均在术后第2天最高(分别为3.65 [SD = 3.08]和3.67 [SD = 2.51])。虽然在术后第7天观察到给药几率有微小的显著降低(OR 0.932, p = 0.017),但父母的灾难化并不能预测在家使用镇痛药。最大父母焦虑并不能预测术后任何一天儿童术后疼痛强度增加的几率。结论:扁桃体切除术前父母灾难对术后使用镇痛的预测价值极小。儿童可能会成功地倡导自己的疼痛控制,因为父母的焦虑和灾难化似乎不会过度影响镇痛药的施用。未来的研究应该探索父母焦虑对可能无法自我倡导疼痛管理的弱势儿科人群的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
276
审稿时长
62 days
期刊介绍: The purpose of the International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology is to concentrate and disseminate information concerning prevention, cure and care of otorhinolaryngological disorders in infants and children due to developmental, degenerative, infectious, neoplastic, traumatic, social, psychiatric and economic causes. The Journal provides a medium for clinical and basic contributions in all of the areas of pediatric otorhinolaryngology. This includes medical and surgical otology, bronchoesophagology, laryngology, rhinology, diseases of the head and neck, and disorders of communication, including voice, speech and language disorders.
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