Abstract

Recurrent pain is a common experience in childhood and adolescence and can result in significant disability in youth, including poor quality of life, school absences, and reduced social activities. Evidence has linked adolescent risk and resilience factors with treatment outcomes. However, less research has focused on examining risk and resilience factors that may influence or predict adolescents’ compliance to treatment within an interdisciplinary pediatric chronic pain management program. Participants included 64 adolescents (M = 15.00 ± 1.69 years); 85.9% female, 84.4% Caucasian who presented to an initial evaluation in an interdisciplinary pediatric pain management program with their caregiver. Youth completed a series of questionnaires at the initial evaluation targeting pain acceptance, self-efficacy, pain catastrophizing, parental responses, pain intensity, and functional disability. Treatment compliance was measured at 3 and 6 months post-intake. Findings indicated that higher levels of adolescent-reported self-efficacy predict decreased treatment session attendance, whereas lower levels of acceptance and parental encouragement/monitoring of symptoms predict increased treatment compliance overall. Several adolescent-reported risk factors were associated with increased functional impairment among this sample. Results highlight the unique importance of risk and resilience factors within the developmental context of adolescence, while also emphasizing the need for further investigation of other relevant influences towards treatment compliance and functional impairment.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPediatric chronic pain (i.e., recurrent and persistent pain lasting longer than 3 months) is an increasingly common developmental health problem among youth [1,2]

  • Pediatric chronic pain is an increasingly common developmental health problem among youth [1,2]

  • This study explored risk and resilience factors contributing to treatment compliance and functional impairment among youth with chronic pain during adolescence

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Summary

Introduction

Pediatric chronic pain (i.e., recurrent and persistent pain lasting longer than 3 months) is an increasingly common developmental health problem among youth [1,2]. Youth with chronic pain experience daily pain interference, including missed school, social skills difficulties, and increased family-related psychosocial stressors [3,4,5]. They report elevated levels of anxiety and depression and are at risk for continued chronic pain, other physical symptoms, and psychological problems into adulthood [6,7,8]. The increase in chronic pain during adolescence may be related to multiple factors that occur during this developmental stage

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