“…These numbers are higher than the prevalence of chronic pain in the German epidemiological sample, which reported a prevalence rate of 33% based on the same chronic pain definition (Häuser, Schmutzer, Hinz, Hilbert, & Brähler, ). However, in line with a Dutch study on recurrent abdominal pain (Spee et al, ), our results indicate that parental pain is not a risk factor for treatment failure in a child receiving primary care due to medically unexplained pain. While it is known that parental cognitions and behaviour have significant impact on a child’s pain experience (Feinstein et al, ; Poppert Cordts, Stone, Beveridge, Wilson, & Noel, ), these cognitions and behaviour may not be necessarily associated with parental chronic pain.…”