Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal (Jan 2023)

Pain-coping scale for children and their parents: a cross-sectional study in children with musculoskeletal pain

  • Maria Backström,
  • Hanna Vuorimaa,
  • Maarit Tarkiainen,
  • Eliisa Löyttyniemi,
  • Liisa Kröger,
  • Kristiina Aalto,
  • Katariina Rebane,
  • Kati Markula-Patjas,
  • Merja Malin,
  • Sirja Sard,
  • Paula Keskitalo,
  • Katja Korkatti,
  • Minna-Maija Grönlund,
  • Milja Möttönen,
  • Heini Pohjankoski,
  • Maiju Hietanen,
  • Johanna Kärki,
  • Paula Vähäsalo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12969-023-00791-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background In a chronic pain-causing disease such as juvenile idiopathic arthritis, the quality of coping with pain is crucial. Parents have a substantial influence on their children’s pain-coping strategies. This study aimed to develop scales for assessing parents’ strategies for coping with their children’s pain and a shorter improved scale for children usable in clinical practice. Methods The number of items in the Finnish version of the pain-coping questionnaire for children was reduced from 39 to 20. A corresponding reduced scale was created for parental use. We recruited consecutive patients from nine hospitals evenly distributed throughout Finland, aged 8–16 years who visited a paediatric rheumatology outpatient clinic and reported musculoskeletal pain during the past week. The patients and parents rated the child’s pain on a visual analogue scale from 0 to 100 and completed pain-coping questionnaires and depression inventories. The selection process of pain questionnaire items was performed using factor analyses. Results The average (standard deviation) age of the 130 patients was 13.0 (2.3) years; 91 (70%) were girls. Four factors were retained in the new, improved Pain-Coping Scales for children and parents. Both scales had 15 items with 2–5 items/factor. The goodness-of-fit statistics and Cronbach’s alpha reliability coefficients were satisfactory to good in both scaled. The criterion validity was acceptable as the demographic, disease related, and the depression and stress questionnaires correlated with the subscales. Conclusions We created a shorter, feasible pain-coping scale for children and a novel scale for caregivers. In clinical work, the pain coping scales may serve as a visualisation of different types of coping strategies for paediatric patients with pain and their parents and facilitate the identification of families in need of psychological support.

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