Psychological therapies for the management of chronic and recurrent pain in children and adolescents.

No SJR dataOct 2, 2018The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Psychological treatments for managing ongoing and repeated pain in children and teens

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Abstract

The review included 47 studies with a total of 2884 children and adolescents completing treatment.

  • Psychological therapies may reduce pain frequency for children and adolescents with headaches immediately after treatment, but this effect does not last at follow-up.
  • There is no significant reduction in disability for young people with headache pain post-treatment, although some benefits were observed at follow-up.
  • For children with mixed pain conditions, psychological therapies may decrease pain intensity post-treatment, but this effect is not sustained at follow-up.
  • Improvements in disability were noted for children with mixed pain conditions both immediately after treatment and at follow-up.
  • Psychological therapies do not appear to have a beneficial effect on depression symptoms in children with chronic pain, but may help reduce anxiety immediately after treatment.

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