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Heather Chapman, MD 1 and Jack Nassau, PhD 2 1 Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Staff Pediatrician, 2 Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry.

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Presentation on theme: "Heather Chapman, MD 1 and Jack Nassau, PhD 2 1 Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Staff Pediatrician, 2 Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Heather Chapman, MD 1 and Jack Nassau, PhD 2 1 Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Staff Pediatrician, 2 Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior and Chief Psychologist Alpert Medical School of Brown University Hasbro Children’s Partial Hospital Program, Rhode Island Hospital

2 Disclosure Dr. Chapman does not have any conflicts of interest to disclose Dr. Nassau does not have any conflicts of interest to disclose

3 got pain?

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5 Objectives Describe the biopsychosocial model of pain Understand the benefits of functional pain assessment Develop strategies for incorporating the biopsychosocial model in primary care pain assessment and management

6 What is Pain? “An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage.” Pain is always a psychological state that cannot be reduced to objective signs. In other words, pain is always subjective. Extensive tissue damage may occur without pain Pain may occur in the total absence of tissue damage

7 Pictures of:

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9 Pain is a Biopsychosocial Experience Biological Site - Pain is absolutely real and is physically experienced Psychological “Interpretation” – “No brain, no pain” Social Context – “Pain is felt where you hurt and where you are”

10 Biological Stress Reponses Autonomic Nervous System Sympathetic-Adrenal-Medullary (SAM) System Catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine) released into blood via sympathetic nerve endings and adrenal medulla Increased blood pressure, heart rate, sweating, and constriction of peripheral nerve endings “Fight or flight” response Central Nervous System Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenocortical (HPA) Axis Hypothalamus releases corticotropin releasing factor >> pituitary releases adrenocorticotropic hormone >> adrenals release cortisol

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12 Possible pain “signs” in children Verbal Emotional Behavioral Physiological Avoidance, somatic complaints (headache, stomach ache), fatigue, irritability, disrupted appetite/sleep, “clinginess”, regressive behaviors

13 Traditional Pain Assessment Location Frequency Duration Intensity What’s missing???

14 Biopsychosocial Pain Assessment Location Frequency Duration Intensity Functional Impact Mood Behavior Family School

15 Functional Pain Assessment Tool Functional Assessment Tool Hasbro Children’s Partial Hospital Program Date: Time Pt reports Pain (Y/N) Activity/Behavior at assessment FACES pain rating (Pt report) Functional rating (Pt report) FACES pain rating (RN report) Coping Strategies/Interventions RN initials [i]

16 Functional Pain Assessment Tool FACES scale 0 2 4 6 8 10 No pain/hurt Very much pain/hurt Functional Scale: (1) MILD = You know the pain is there, but it doesn’t bother you much. (2) MODERATE = The pain does bother you, but you can still do things. (3) SEVERE = The pain bothers you a lot, you can’t do very much (4) VERY SEVERE = You can’t do anything but rest. RN Initials RN Signature/Print Name Date/Time _____ __________________________________ ________

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18 Pain Management Strategies Medical Provider Patient Family Professional referral

19 Pain Management Strategies – Medical Provider Framework - Holistic approach Medical testing and treatment AND psychosocial context Emphasize mind-body connection Mental and emotional factors are important even when medical findings are positive The lack of a positive medical finding does not mean the pain is “all in my head”, “unreal”, or “made up” Possible questions What are you doing to manage the pain? How does the pain affect your mood? How does your mood affect the pain?

20 Pain Management Strategies– Patient Pain monitoring (clinical implications) Stay active - exercise releases endorphins Sleep schedule Actively focus/attend to other things – sometimes called distraction Diaphragmatic breathing

21 Pain Management Strategies - Family Validate pain experience and expectation for pain management Limit attention to pain symptom Limit asking about pain Respond to pain complaint with questions/directions related to management Focus on functioning rather than pain intensity Encourage pain coping strategies Maintain normative expectations Make decisions that empower person, not pain

22 Pain Management Strategies Professional Referral Family Therapy Focuses on influencing family stressors, relationships, and behaviors Cognitive behavioral therapy Focuses on addressing pain related thoughts, emotions and behaviors Includes setting specific functional goals Relaxation Training A group of techniques designed to produce physiological, psychological and behavioral changes Specific rationale to decrease arousal, muscle tension, and negative mood states Biofeedback Instrumentation that provides data on psychophysiological processes that are not usually consciously available to the person, but can be brought under voluntary control

23 Family Therapy A child’s pain affects the whole family Help family adopt a holistic view that acknowledges the child’s (and family’s) physical and emotional functioning Model this same approach – support appropriate medical treatments Support child, parents, entire family in functioning through pain despite fear of doing so Address specific family pain responses/behaviors Address additional family stressors or relationship patterns that may be influencing pain expression

24 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Recognizes the interrelationships between thoughts, feelings and actions (behaviors) Work on changing thoughts, behaviors, and emotions to manage pain experience Cognitive restructuring Graduated exposure to increase functioning (goal setting) Positive reinforcement for task completion

25 Changing Maladaptive Pain Thoughts Addressing automatic negative thoughts with positive coping statements >>> “I’m always in pain!” “I usually feel good in the afternoon.” “I can’t do anything because of my pain!” >>> “I can still ______ even though I have pain. Limit catastrophizing and “all-or-none” thinking

26 Relaxation Training A skill that develops with repetition over time An active and empowering strategy (not merely “relaxing” in front of the TV) Attend to environment and body position Diaphragmatic breathing Progressive Muscle Relaxation Guided imagery

27 Diaphragmatic (Belly) Breathing Often recommended, not given adequate trial Pacing and mechanics are related and both are important Thoracic “Chest” breathing is more common Uses chest muscles; leads to faster, shallower breaths Diaphragmatic “belly” breathing Uses diaphragm muscle; leads to slower, deeper, and longer breaths In through nose, out through mouth Belly should rise on in-breath, collapse on out-breath

28 PMR and Guided Imagery Progressive Muscle Relaxation Typically done sitting up Series of tensing and relaxing muscle groups Focus on noticing the difference between tension and relaxation so that tension can be a cue to relax Guided Imagery Often done reclining or laying down Use mental imagery and associate it with relaxing and pain relieving words, sensations, and suggestions

29 Purple = Finger temperature Orange = Skin conductance level Grey = Skin conductance response Green = Forehead muscle tension Biofeedback

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31 THANK YOU


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