Article

Impact of Threat Level, Task Instruction, and Individual Characteristics on Cold Pressor Pain and Fear among Children and Their Parents

Details

Citation

Boerner KE, Noel M, Birnie KA, Caes L, Petter M & Chambers CT (2016) Impact of Threat Level, Task Instruction, and Individual Characteristics on Cold Pressor Pain and Fear among Children and Their Parents. Pain Practice, 16 (6), pp. 657-668. https://doi.org/10.1111/papr.12306

Abstract
The cold pressor task (CPT) is increasingly used to induce experimental pain in children, but the specific methodology of the CPT is quite variable across pediatric studies. This study examined how subtle variations in CPT methodology (eg. provision of low- or high-threat information regarding the task; provision or omission of maximum immersion time) may influence children's and parents' perceptions of the pain experience. Forty-eight children (8 to 14 years) and their parents were randomly assigned to receive information about the CPT that varied on 2 dimensions, prior to completing the task: (i) threat level: high-threat (task described as very painful, high pain expressions depicted) or low-threat (standard CPT instructions provided, low pain expressions depicted); (ii) ceiling: informed (provided maximum immersion time) or uninformed (information about maximum immersion time omitted). Parents and children in the high-threat condition expected greater child pain, and these children reported higher perceived threat of pain and state pain catastrophizing. For children in the low-threat condition, an informed ceiling was associated with less state pain catastrophizing during the CPT. Pain intensity, tolerance, and fear during the CPT did not differ by experimental group, but were predicted by child characteristics. Findings suggest that provision of threatening information may impact anticipatory outcomes, but experienced pain was better explained by individual child variables. © 2015 World Institute of Pain.

Keywords
cold pressor task; pediatric pain; experimental methods; fear; children; parents; threat

Journal
Pain Practice: Volume 16, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2016
Publication date online26/05/2015
Date accepted by journal10/02/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/23872
PublisherWiley-Blackwell for World Institute of Pain
ISSN1530-7085
eISSN1533-2500

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Dr Line Caes

Dr Line Caes

Associate Professor, Psychology

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