Caregiver-child discrepancies in reports of child emotional symptoms in pediatric chronic pain

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Abstract

Objective: Pediatric chronic pain evaluation includes self-reports and/or caregiver proxy-reports across biopsychosocial domains. Limited data exist on the effects of caregiver-child discrepancies in pediatric pain assessment. In children with chronic pain, we examined associations among discrepancies in caregiver-child reports of child anxiety and depressive symptoms and child functional impairment. Methods: Participants were 202 children (Mage=14.49 ± 2.38 years; 68.8% female) with chronic pain and their caregivers (95.5% female). Children and caregivers completed the Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS) and RCADS-Parent, respectively. Children also completed the Functional Disability Inventory. Mean difference tests examined caregiver-child discrepancies. Moderation analyses examined whether associations between child self-reported anxiety and depressive symptoms and functional impairment varied as a function of caregiver proxy-report. Results: Children reported more anxiety and depressive symptoms compared with their caregivers' proxy-reports (Z = -4.83, p

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APA

Martin, S. R., Zeltzer, L. K., Seidman, L. C., Allyn, K. E., & Payne, L. A. (2020). Caregiver-child discrepancies in reports of child emotional symptoms in pediatric chronic pain. Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 45(4), 359–369. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsz098

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