1991
DOI: 10.1542/peds.87.2.171
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Individual Differences in Children's Response to Pain: Role of Temperament and Parental Characteristics

Abstract: Sixty-five families were enlisted in a study exploring factors associated with distress behavior in 5-year-old children receiving diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis immunizations. At a home visit 1 month before the immunization, the following measures were obtained: (1) the Behavioral Style Questionnaire, a measure of temperament; (2) parental self-reports of medically related attributes (eg, "good patient"); (3) parental attitudes toward pain in children and responsiveness to their child's pain; and (4) parental pr… Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
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“…Some aspects of temperament found to be associated with poorer pain outcomes include nonadaptability (Schechter, Bernstein, Beck, Hart, & Scherzer, 1991), high rhythmicity (Helgadóttir & Wilson, 2004), high emotional reactivity (Grunau, Whitfield, & Petrie, 1994), low mood (Helgadóttir & Wilson, 2004), low sociability (Kain et al., 2002) and low distractability (Broome, Rehwaldt, & Fogg, 1998). These features may be characteristic of the constellation identified as a pain-sensitive temperament (Chen, Craske, Katz, Schwartz, & Zeltzer, 2000).…”
Section: Role Of Individual Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some aspects of temperament found to be associated with poorer pain outcomes include nonadaptability (Schechter, Bernstein, Beck, Hart, & Scherzer, 1991), high rhythmicity (Helgadóttir & Wilson, 2004), high emotional reactivity (Grunau, Whitfield, & Petrie, 1994), low mood (Helgadóttir & Wilson, 2004), low sociability (Kain et al., 2002) and low distractability (Broome, Rehwaldt, & Fogg, 1998). These features may be characteristic of the constellation identified as a pain-sensitive temperament (Chen, Craske, Katz, Schwartz, & Zeltzer, 2000).…”
Section: Role Of Individual Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%