4.2 Article

Everyday pain responses in children with and without developmental delays

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 301-308

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/25.5.301

Keywords

developmental delays; pain response; communication deficits

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Objective: To examine whether children with developmental delays respond to painful events differently than nondelayed children. Methods: Sixty families participated. Children between the ages of 2 and 6 years were observed at daycare centers while engaged in usual daily activities, such as free play. Spontaneous painful incidents and the child's responses were recorded using an observational measure (Dalhousie Everyday Pain Scale) designed to capture pain behavior. Results: Children with developmental delays (n = 24) displayed a less intense distress response to an equivocal pain event than nondelayed children (n = 36). Children with developmental delays were more likely to display no reaction following a pain event, whereas children without delays cried more often. Further, children with developmental delays engaged in fewer help-seeking behaviors and were less likely to display a social response following a pain event than nondelayed children. Conclusions: Children with developmental delays appear to react in a different manner to pain events than nondelayed children do; we discuss a possible socio-communicative deficit.

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