4.4 Article

The influence of maternal vulnerability and parenting stress on chronic pain in adolescents in a general population sample: The TRAILS study

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 150-159

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpain.2011.06.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO (Medical Research Council) [GB-MW 940-38-011]
  2. ZonMW [100-001-004, 60-60600-98-018, 60-60600-97-118, 261-98-710]
  3. Social Sciences Council [GB-MaGW 480-01-006, GBMaGW 480-07-001, GBMaGW 457-03-018, GB-MaGW 452-04-314, GB-MaGW 452-06-004]
  4. NWO [175.010.2003.005]
  5. Sophia Foundation for Medical Research [301, 393]
  6. Dutch Ministry of Justice (WODC)

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Investigating possible psychosocial predictors of unexplained chronic pain in adolescents is crucial in understanding its development and prevention. A general population sample of adolescents (n = 2230) from the TRAILS cohort study was investigated longitudinally to assess the influence of maternal vulnerability, in terms of anxiety, depression and stress, and parenting stress at age 10-12 years, on the presence of chronic pain at age 12-15 years. Of these adolescents, 269 (12.9%) reported experiencing chronic pain, of which 77% reported severe chronic pain and 22% reported multiple chronic pain. Maternal anxiety, maternal stress and higher levels of parenting stress were related to chronic pain at a later age. Subgroup analyses showed similar results for adolescents with severe chronic pain. Mediation analyses indicated that parenting stress mediates the effect between maternal anxiety, or stress, and chronic pain. The findings suggest that interventions to diminish maternal feelings of anxiety and stress, while in turn adjusting maternal behaviour, may prevent the development of chronic pain in adolescence.

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