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Children's Pain - The Facts

Key points to remember about children's pain

  • as parents you are often the best judge of your child's pain
  • listen to what your child is telling you and watch how they are behaving
  • if you are worried or in doubt about your child's pain, talk to your local doctor, or if you are in hospital, a nurse or doctor
  • if you are unsure about whether or not to give any medicine for your child's pain, it is best to get advice from your doctor or pharmacist

What is pain?

Young children or children who are sick cannot always tell us exactly what they are feeling. This can be quite upsetting for parents who may feel confused about what their child is experiencing. Parents know their child's usual reactions and behaviours but sometimes pains and fear may change these reactions.

Many things affect your child's experience of pain:

  • your child's age
  • your child's beliefs and understanding about the cause of the pain
  • your child's beliefs in their ability to cope
  • your child's previous experiences with pain and how they have seen other people deal with pain
  • your child's learned responses to pain

How long does pain last?

Acute pain

The term 'acute pain' refers to pain that is not long-lasting. The pain may be caused by an operation, injury, illness, or medical procedure. Depending on what has caused the pain, the pain may last a few seconds (for example, a needle) through to a few weeks or months (for example, following an injury). Some pain from an operation is normal and is a part of the whole healing process. Medicines can help lessen acute pain. You can also help your child with acute pain by using methods such as relaxation and distraction techniques.

Persistent or chronic pain

Persistent or chronic pain is any pain that lasts for a longer period of time, usually longer than 3 months. This pain can be persistent (continuing), or come and go at different times. It is sometimes difficult to find a cause for persisting pain; however, there are treatments and special programmes that can help your child cope better with this type of pain.

See more information about Chronic or persistent pain [1].

How do you know your child is in pain?

It is not always easy to know how much pain your child is experiencing but listening to what they say and watching what they do can help give you a better idea. 

Things that can show that your child is in pain include:

  • crying
  • facial changes or pulling a face such as grimace or frown
  • changes in sleeping or eating patterns
  • becoming quiet and/or withdrawn
  • screaming
  • refusing to move
  • overall change in their function

Remember that changes in a child's behaviour can also happen because they are scared or frightened.

Some children may tell us they are sore or hurting but may find it hard to say how much.

Children can use a scale such as the Faces Pain Scale - Revised (PDF, 155KB) [2]. This will involve asking your child to point to the face that shows how much hurt they are feeling from "no pain" on the left through to "very much pain" on the right. You can tell staff which number face your child has pointed to and that will help them to know how your child is feeling.

Young children or those with intellectual difficulties should have their pain assessed using the Modified FLACC scoring tool. For each of the categories, select a score of either 0, 1, or 2 and add them up for a score out of 10. This number will help you to explain your child's pain to staff.

Acknowledgements: 

Starship Foundation and the Paediatric Society of New Zealand acknowledge the cooperation of The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney Children's Hospital at Randwick, and Kaleidoscope - Hunter Children's Health Network in making this content available to patients and families.

External links and downloads (see the online version for more information at other websites)

The Centre for Pediatric Pain Research (Canada) [3]

Provides information for families on helping children cope with painful procedures:

  • Pain, pain go away: Helping children with pain - a booklet to help parents understand pain (PDF, 1.2 MB) [4]
  • Making cancer less painful: A handbook for parents [5] - a booklet to help parents understand pain and teach them how they can help their child deal with pain from cancer (PDF 565kb)

Pain kete (Starship Child Health) [6]

[7]The Starship Child Health Complex Pain Service has developed the pain kete. It covers different aspects of managing chronic pain in children and teens (PDF, 2.1MB).

This page last reviewed 23 July 2020.
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Source URL: https://www.kidshealth.org.nz/childrens-pain-facts?language=rar

Links
[1] https://www.kidshealth.org.nz/chronic-or-persistent-pain
[2] http://s3.amazonaws.com/rdcms-iasp/files/production/public/Content/ContentFolders/Resources2/FPSR/facepainscale_english_eng-au-ca.pdf
[3] https://www.kidshealth.org.nz/node/1851?language=rar
[4] https://pediatric-pain.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/PPGA2003.pdf
[5] https://pediatric-pain.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/MakingCancerLessPainful.pdf
[6] https://www.kidshealth.org.nz/node/2517?language=rar
[7] https://media.starship.org.nz/the-pain-kete/pain-kete.pdf
[8] https://www.kidshealth.org.nz/contact?from=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.kidshealth.org.nz%2Fprint%2F107%3Flanguage%3Drar