Article

Impact of parental catastrophizing and contextual threat on parents' emotional and behavioral responses to their child's pain

Details

Citation

Caes L, Vervoort T, Trost Z & Goubert L (2012) Impact of parental catastrophizing and contextual threat on parents' emotional and behavioral responses to their child's pain. Pain, 153 (3), pp. 687-695. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pain.2011.12.007

Abstract
Limited research has addressed processes underlying parents' empathic responses to their child's pain. The present study investigated the effects of parental catastrophizing, threatening information about the child's pain, and child pain expression upon parental emotional and behavioral responses to their child's pain. A total of 56 school children participated in a heat pain task consisting of 48 trials while being observed by 1 of their parents. Trials were preceded by a blue or yellow circle, signaling possible pain stimulation (i.e., pain signal) or no pain stimulation (i.e., safety signal). Parents received either neutral or threatening information regarding the heat stimulus. Parents' negative emotional responses when anticipating their child's pain were assessed using psychophysiological measures - i.e., fear-potentiated startle and corrugator EMG activity. Parental behavioral response to their child's pain (i.e., pain attending talk) was assessed during a 3-minute parent-child interaction that followed the pain task. The Child Facial Coding System (CFCS) was used to assess children's facial pain expression during the pain task. Results indicated that receiving threatening information was associated with a stronger parental corrugator EMG activity during pain signals in comparison with safety signals. The same pattern was found for parental fear-potentiated startle reflex, particularly when the child's facial pain expression was high. In addition, parents who reported high levels of catastrophizing thought about their child's pain engaged, in comparison with low-catastrophizing parents, in more pain-attending talk when they received threatening information. The findings are discussed in the context of affective-motivational theories of pain. © 2011 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Keywords
Parents; Pain catastrophizing; Distress; Fear-potentiated startle reflex; Corrugator; EMG activity; Parental behavior

Journal
Pain: Volume 153, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2012
Publication date online23/01/2012
Date accepted by journal09/12/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/24662
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0304-3959

People (1)

People

Dr Line Caes

Dr Line Caes

Associate Professor, Psychology

Research programmes

Research centres/groups

Research themes