Pain Coping Strategies in Children With CP
- Conditions
- PainCerebral Palsy
- Registration Number
- NCT03468270
- Lead Sponsor
- Centre Médico-Chirurgical de Réadaptation des Massues Croix Rouge Française
- Brief Summary
The aim of the study is to describe pain coping strategies and their evolution in children and adolescent with cerebral palsy.
- Detailed Description
Towards the end of the 20th century, Lazarus and Folkmann developed the concept that the individual provides "cognitive and behavioral efforts to control, reduce or tolerate the internal or external demands that threaten or exceed his or her resources". These cognitive and behavioral efforts are grouped under the term "coping", which describes a process rather than personality traits or abilities. Coping is not about controlling stress but about diminishing, avoiding, tolerating or accepting it.
The pain, "unpleasant sensory and emotional experience related to a bodily injury", aims to warn the individual that the integrity of his body is threatened, and is thus a real "stressor". It will lead to the choice of coping strategies, which depends in part on the characteristics of the individual (his beliefs, stress endurance, anxiety propensity) and environmental variables (characteristics of the painful situation, social support and emotional connections, information about the threatening situation). Many studies have shown that the strategies used to cope with chronic pain in adults and children play a major role in the adjustment of patients to their pathology, in terms of emotional distress, disability, and quality of life. The different types of strategies have been widely studied in the literature in so-called "typical" children. Active strategies classically found in pediatrics are distraction, cognitive self-instruction, and problem solving. These active strategies are said to be positive because they have been proven to help children manage pain more effectively than passive strategies such as catastrophism, helplessness, or seeking social support, which are dysfunctional because they are not focused on the problem and increase the negative consequences associated with pain.
This study is about children with cerebral palsy (CP) because the great variability and complexity of the manifestations of the pathology and the therapeutic treatment make it that there is a big risk for the child to experience pain, with a prevalence of pain ranging from 60% to 73%, depending on the evaluation methods. Research has done a great deal in recent years to improve the assessment and management of inborn or induced pain in children with disabilities, with many validated recommendations, even though this still appears to be a neglected comorbidity in PC. However, coping strategies of PC children with pain have never been studied. The purpose of this work is to describe these strategies in PC children and adolescents, as well as their evolution.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 142
- Confirmed diagnostic of cerebral palsy
- GMFCS I, II, III, IV
- Oral language skills with syntactic abilities
- Acute pain episode
- severe cognitive impairment
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method PPCI-F (Pediatric Pain and Coping inventory - French) At inclusion Coping strategies used to face pain are measured by the French version of the PPCI. This scale leads to 4 subscores, corresponding to 4 different strategies.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method SPQ (Structured Pain Questionnaire) At inclusion This questionnaire assesses the location and frequency of pain episodes (\<1 time / month, 1 time / month, 2-3 times / month, 1 time / week, 2-6 times / week, each day), their duration (\<4 weeks, 4 weeks, 3 months,\> 3 months) and pain intensity (0 to 100 on scoring scale).
Evolution of PPCI-F scores according to age. At inclusion The evolution of the coping strategies used according to the age of the patient is assessed by the Spearman correlation.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Croix rouge française Centre Médico-Chirurgical de Réadaptation des Massues
🇫🇷Lyon, France