4.1 Article

Parent and child self- and co-regulation during pediatric venipuncture: Exploring heart rate variability and the effects of a mindfulness intervention

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dev.22277

Keywords

acute pediatric pain; co-regulation; emotion regulation; heart rate variability; mindfulness

Funding

  1. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship
  2. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
  3. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  4. Ministry of Research Innovation

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This study aimed to examine heart rate variability (HRV) during pediatric venipuncture and its association with mindfulness, parent anxiety, and catastrophizing. The findings showed that HRV differed throughout the procedure and practicing mindfulness did not consistently affect HRV. Positive synchrony in HRV was observed in dyads with high parental catastrophizing. The results contribute to our understanding of children's regulatory mechanisms.
Needle procedures are common throughout childhood and often elicit distress in children and parents. Heart rate variability (HRV), as an index of emotion regulation, can inform both self-regulatory and co-regulatory processes. Mindfulness may serve to regulate distress; however, no research has studied mindfulness or parent and child regulatory responding concurrently during venipuncture. Stemming from a randomized controlled trial investigating a mindfulness intervention, this study sought to describe regulatory responding (via HRV) throughout pediatric venipuncture and the role of cognitive-affective factors (mindfulness, parent anxiety, catastrophizing) in 61 parent-child dyads (7-12 years). We examined (1) patterns of parent and child HRV throughout venipuncture and whether a brief, randomly assigned audio-guided mindfulness versus control exercise affected this pattern and (2) the extent to which changes in parent and child HRV were synchronized throughout venipuncture, and whether parent catastrophizing and anxiety moderated this association. HRV differed as a function of procedural phase. Practicing the mindfulness versus control exercise did not consistently affect HRV in dyads. Positive synchrony was observed during the end of the intervention in dyads with high parental catastrophizing. Otherwise, a pattern of nonsynchrony emerged. Results provide foundational knowledge regarding children's internal (self) and external (parent) regulation mechanisms. RCT registration: NCT03941717.

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