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

May 7, 2014The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Psychological therapies to manage ongoing and repeated pain in children and teens

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Abstract

A total of 2111 participants completed treatments across 37 studies evaluating psychological therapies for children's chronic pain.

  • Psychological therapies appear to reduce pain intensity for children with headache conditions both immediately after treatment and at follow-up.
  • There is evidence of a small reduction in disability for headache sufferers post-treatment, but this was less clear at follow-up.
  • Psychological therapies show a small beneficial effect on anxiety immediately after treatment for headache, but this effect does not persist at follow-up.
  • For non-headache pain conditions, these therapies are associated with improvements in pain and disability post-treatment, but not at follow-up.
  • Limited evidence exists regarding the effects of psychological therapies on depression and anxiety for children with chronic pain.

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Full Text

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