When “don’t worry” communicates fear: Children’s perceptions of parental reassurance and distraction during a painful medical procedure

Children’s distress during painful medical procedures is strongly influenced by adult behavior. Adult reassurance (e.g., “it’s okay”) is associated with increased child distress whereas distraction is associated with increased child coping. It is unknown why reassurance shows this counterintuitive r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pain (Amsterdam) 2010-07, Vol.150 (1), p.52-58
Hauptverfasser: McMurtry, C. Meghan, Chambers, Christine T., McGrath, Patrick J., Asp, Elissa
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container_issue 1
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creator McMurtry, C. Meghan
Chambers, Christine T.
McGrath, Patrick J.
Asp, Elissa
description Children’s distress during painful medical procedures is strongly influenced by adult behavior. Adult reassurance (e.g., “it’s okay”) is associated with increased child distress whereas distraction is associated with increased child coping. It is unknown why reassurance shows this counterintuitive relationship with child distress. The present research investigated whether children perceive their parents as fearful when they reassure using complementary observational and experimental methodologies. One hundred children (40 boys, 60 girls) 5–10 years old ( M = 8.02, SD = 1.69) and their parents (86 mothers, 14 fathers) participated. First, spontaneous parent–child interactions during pediatric venipuncture were captured and used for a video-mediated recall task in which the children viewed instances of parental reassurance and distraction and rated their parents’ fear and happiness. Second, the children were asked to rate the intensity of parental fear and happiness for 12 video vignettes showing an actor posing as a parent during venipuncture. To determine whether the children’s perceptions varied with the qualities of the behavior, the vignettes manipulated: facial expression (happy vs. fearful), vocal tone (rising vs. falling), and content (informative reassurance vs. uninformative reassurance vs. distraction). For both tasks, the children provided higher ratings of fear during reassurance than distraction. In response to the vignettes, the children gave higher ratings of parental fear for a fearful facial expression, but the influence of vocal tone differed with the verbal content of the utterance. The results provide insight into the complexity of adult reassurance and highlight the important role of parental facial expression, tone, and verbal content during painful medical procedures.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.pain.2010.02.021
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Adult
Analysis of Variance
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child, Preschool
Distraction
Emotion
Facial Expression
Fear - psychology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Male
Pain - psychology
Pain Measurement
Parent behavior
Parent-Child Relations
Pediatric pain
Phlebotomy - psychology
Procedural pain
Reassurance
Social Perception
Somesthesis and somesthetic pathways (proprioception, exteroception, nociception)
interoception
electrolocation. Sensory receptors
Statistics, Nonparametric
Stress, Psychological - psychology
Vertebrates: nervous system and sense organs
title When “don’t worry” communicates fear: Children’s perceptions of parental reassurance and distraction during a painful medical procedure
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