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When Children Feel Pain

From Everyday Aches to Chronic Conditions

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In When Children Feel Pain, Rachel Rabkin Peachman, an award-winning science and parenting journalist, and Anna Wilson, a pediatric pain specialist, show how the latest medical advances can help us care for children when they suffer.
Untreated or misdiagnosed pain is an epidemic among children. Nearly one out of every five children in the United States suffers chronic pain, while 30 to 40 percent of children over age twelve report feeling some form of pain in any given week. Yet only a small fraction of children receive appropriate treatment, increasing the risk that they will struggle with pain later in life. But, as Peachman and Wilson show, if we give pain the attention it deserves early in life, we can minimize short-term distress and halt the development of long-term chronic pain problems.
Whether you are a parent, medical professional, teacher, or anyone else who cares for children, Peachman and Wilson can teach you how to help kids cope with pain. The authors dispel myths and fears surrounding childhood vaccination and opioid prescription medication and outline a range of effective pain-relieving strategies, from cognitive behavioral therapy to parent-led soothing techniques. Helping children address pain is not only at the heart of caretaking; it also proves to be a foundation for lifelong health.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from June 6, 2022
      Children’s pain is too often “dismissed, minimized, and flat-out ignored,” according to this alarming and accessible look at pediatric pain management from journalist Peachman and pediatric psychologist Wilson. They debunk myths that have led to the neglect of infant pain, such as that very young children cannot feel pain, that anesthesia is too dangerous for infants, and that early pain has no lasting impact. Even today, they write, medical students receive “only a handful of education hours devoted to pain management” in their training. Peachman and Wilson address vaccinations and NICU practices—two common medical situations in which children suffer—and offer practical approaches for improving children’s experiences: distractions (such as a cloth or pacifier dipped in sugar water) and skin-to-skin contact can “influence how the brain interprets the pain signals it receives.” Peachman and Wilson make a solid case that the longer pain goes unnoticed, the more likely it is to become chronic, and their message that addressing pain beginning in childhood is not only an obligate kindness but essential for managing long-term health is a powerful one. This is worth a look for medical professionals and parents alike.

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  • English

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