利用儿童图画书让儿童了解疼痛和伤害:一项定性研究。

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jpain.2024.03.016
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引用次数: 0

摘要

疼痛体验在儿童时期很常见(如 "日常 "疼痛、疫苗注射),是儿童了解疼痛和伤害的重要机会。这些经历可能会影响儿童对疼痛的基本看法和终生信念。关于儿童在何种社会文化背景下了解疼痛和伤害的研究很少。其中一个尚未探索的情境是共同阅读图画书(例如,父母/照顾者和儿童之间的共同阅读)。在本研究中,我们调查了共同阅读包含疼痛和/或伤害描述的图画书是否会促进父母/照顾者与儿童之间的互动。如果观察到了互动,我们将探讨这些互动的内容。我们从南澳大利亚州的图书馆招募了 20 名父母/照顾者(8 名男性,12 名女性)及其子女(n = 27;10 名男孩,17 名女孩)。父母/照顾者-子女家庭从 8 本(7 本小说,1 本非小说)书中选择了不同程度的疼痛/伤害相关内容。对分享阅读的互动进行了录像、转录,并使用反思性主题分析法对图画书进行了分析。在共同阅读图画书的过程中,观察了父母/照顾者和儿童之间与疼痛/伤害相关的互动。定性分析产生了 1 个主主题和 3 个次主题。研究结果表明,通过讨论书中人物的经历,共同阅读为儿童对疼痛和伤害的理解提供了一个社会化的机会。这包括向儿童传授有关疼痛和伤害的知识,以及促进他们对被描绘成处于疼痛中的人物的同情和情感调适。最后,如果绘本以轻松或不切实际的方式描绘疼痛/伤害,家长/看护人往往会以可观察到/可表达的娱乐方式来回应。总之,共同阅读图画书为儿童了解疼痛和伤害提供了一个尚未开发的社交机会。这些互动提供了重要的机会,可以利用这些机会促进儿童在发育的关键时期学习与疼痛相关的适应性概念和行为。
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Harnessing Children’s Picture Books to Socialize Children About Pain and Injury: A Qualitative Study

Pain experiences are common during childhood (eg, “everyday” pain, vaccine injections) and are powerful opportunities for children to learn about pain and injury. These experiences likely inform fundamental and life-long beliefs about pain. There is scant research investigating the sociocultural contexts in which children learn about pain and injury. One unexplored context is the shared reading of picture books (eg, between parents/caregivers and children). In this study, we investigated whether shared reading of picture books that included depictions of pain and/or injury prompted parent/caregiver-child interactions. If interactions were observed, we explored what those interactions entailed. Twenty parents/caregivers (8 men, 12 women) and their children (n = 27; 10 boys, 17 girls) were recruited from libraries in South Australia. Parent/caregiver-child families chose from 8 books (7 fiction, 1 nonfiction) with varying amounts of pain/injury-related content. Shared reading interactions were video recorded, transcribed, and analyzed alongside analysis of the picture books using reflexive thematic analysis. Pain/injury-related interactions were observed between parents/caregivers and children during shared reading of picture books. Qualitative analyses generated 1 main theme and 3 subthemes. Findings identified that shared reading presented an opportunity for children’s understanding of pain and injury to be socialized through discussion of characters’ experiences. This included teaching children about pain and injury, as well as promoting empathy and emotional attunement toward characters who were depicted as being in pain. Finally, parents/caregivers often responded with observable/expressed amusement if pain/injury was depicted in a light-hearted or unrealistic way. Overall, shared reading of picture books presents an untapped opportunity to socialize children about pain and injury.

Perspective

Shared reading of picture books that have depictions of pain and/or injury can prompt parent/caregiver-child interactions about pain and injury. These interactions present critical opportunities that can be harnessed to promote children’s learning of adaptive pain-related concepts and behaviors during a critical developmental period.

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来源期刊
Journal of Pain
Journal of Pain 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
7.50%
发文量
441
审稿时长
42 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pain publishes original articles related to all aspects of pain, including clinical and basic research, patient care, education, and health policy. Articles selected for publication in the Journal are most commonly reports of original clinical research or reports of original basic research. In addition, invited critical reviews, including meta analyses of drugs for pain management, invited commentaries on reviews, and exceptional case studies are published in the Journal. The mission of the Journal is to improve the care of patients in pain by providing a forum for clinical researchers, basic scientists, clinicians, and other health professionals to publish original research.
期刊最新文献
Contemporary media campaigns for musculoskeletal pain: A systematic review and meta-analysis with social marketing benchmarking. Chronic pain-induced functional and structural alterations in the brain: a multi-modal meta-analysis. Language Errors in Pain Medicine: An Umbrella Review. Within-person relationships between catastrophizing and pain intensity during a mind-body intervention to prevent persistent pain and disability after acute traumatic orthopedic injury Enhancing the trustworthiness of pain research: A call to action.
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