
Child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term recovery in youth undergoing spinal fusion surgery
- Author
- Jenny Thorsell Cederberg, Sara Laureen Bartels, Måns Thulin, Melanie Beeckman, Rikard K. Wicksell and Liesbet Goubert (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Objectives: Undertreated pediatric post-surgical pain negatively affects quality-of-life and functioning and may lead to chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP). Predictors of recovery have been identified but more research is needed, particularly regarding resilience and social factors, and long-term effects. The aim of the present study was to investigate child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term post-surgical recovery for adolescents. Methods: Participants were patients with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS),12-18 years, undergoing spinal fusion, and their parents. Recruitment occurred at the orthopaedic units at four hospitals in Belgium. Data were collected before surgery (T0), at three (T1) and six weeks (T2), six months (T3) and one year (T4) post-surgery. Multiple regression models were used to evaluate the predictive effect of pain intensity, pain catastrophizing, psychological flexibility, and pain acceptance on long-term functioning, quality-of-life, and pain. Results: The sample comprised 100 adolescents and 61 parents. Pain at T0, T1, and T3 and adolescent pain catastrophizing (T0) predicted quality-of-life, functioning, and pain at T4 (while pain at T2 predicted quality-of-life and pain). Parent pain catastrophizing predicted pain at T4. Adolescent and parental psychological flexibility predicted quality-of-life, and parent psychological flexibility also predicted pain at T4. Adolescent acceptance at T1 predicted pain, and acceptance at T2 predicted quality-of-life, at T4. Discussion: The study identified pain and adolescent pain catastrophizing as risk factors, and adolescent and parental psychological flexibility and adolescent pain acceptance as resilience factors, for long-term recovery in youths undergoing spinal fusion. Post-surgical pain management targeting these factors may therefore promote recovery for these adolescents.
- Keywords
- long-term postsurgical recovery, adolescents, psychological flexibility, pain acceptance, health-related quality of life, CHRONIC POSTSURGICAL PAIN, QUALITY-OF-LIFE, PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES, POSTOPERATIVE PAIN, PSYCHOLOGICAL INFLEXIBILITY, PEDIATRIC PAIN, QUESTIONNAIRE, ACCEPTANCE, AVOIDANCE, IDENTIFICATION
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HRC4A97DHAVXFFM2T50837Y0
- MLA
- Thorsell Cederberg, Jenny, et al. “Child and Parent Risk and Resilience Factors as Predictors of Long-Term Recovery in Youth Undergoing Spinal Fusion Surgery.” CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN, vol. 40, no. 5, 2024, pp. 278–87, doi:10.1097/ajp.0000000000001200.
- APA
- Thorsell Cederberg, J., Bartels, S. L., Thulin, M., Beeckman, M., Wicksell, R. K., & Goubert, L. (2024). Child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term recovery in youth undergoing spinal fusion surgery. CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN, 40(5), 278–287. https://doi.org/10.1097/ajp.0000000000001200
- Chicago author-date
- Thorsell Cederberg, Jenny, Sara Laureen Bartels, Måns Thulin, Melanie Beeckman, Rikard K. Wicksell, and Liesbet Goubert. 2024. “Child and Parent Risk and Resilience Factors as Predictors of Long-Term Recovery in Youth Undergoing Spinal Fusion Surgery.” CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN 40 (5): 278–87. https://doi.org/10.1097/ajp.0000000000001200.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Thorsell Cederberg, Jenny, Sara Laureen Bartels, Måns Thulin, Melanie Beeckman, Rikard K. Wicksell, and Liesbet Goubert. 2024. “Child and Parent Risk and Resilience Factors as Predictors of Long-Term Recovery in Youth Undergoing Spinal Fusion Surgery.” CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN 40 (5): 278–287. doi:10.1097/ajp.0000000000001200.
- Vancouver
- 1.Thorsell Cederberg J, Bartels SL, Thulin M, Beeckman M, Wicksell RK, Goubert L. Child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term recovery in youth undergoing spinal fusion surgery. CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN. 2024;40(5):278–87.
- IEEE
- [1]J. Thorsell Cederberg, S. L. Bartels, M. Thulin, M. Beeckman, R. K. Wicksell, and L. Goubert, “Child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term recovery in youth undergoing spinal fusion surgery,” CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN, vol. 40, no. 5, pp. 278–287, 2024.
@article{01HRC4A97DHAVXFFM2T50837Y0, abstract = {{Objectives: Undertreated pediatric post-surgical pain negatively affects quality-of-life and functioning and may lead to chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP). Predictors of recovery have been identified but more research is needed, particularly regarding resilience and social factors, and long-term effects. The aim of the present study was to investigate child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term post-surgical recovery for adolescents. Methods: Participants were patients with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS),12-18 years, undergoing spinal fusion, and their parents. Recruitment occurred at the orthopaedic units at four hospitals in Belgium. Data were collected before surgery (T0), at three (T1) and six weeks (T2), six months (T3) and one year (T4) post-surgery. Multiple regression models were used to evaluate the predictive effect of pain intensity, pain catastrophizing, psychological flexibility, and pain acceptance on long-term functioning, quality-of-life, and pain. Results: The sample comprised 100 adolescents and 61 parents. Pain at T0, T1, and T3 and adolescent pain catastrophizing (T0) predicted quality-of-life, functioning, and pain at T4 (while pain at T2 predicted quality-of-life and pain). Parent pain catastrophizing predicted pain at T4. Adolescent and parental psychological flexibility predicted quality-of-life, and parent psychological flexibility also predicted pain at T4. Adolescent acceptance at T1 predicted pain, and acceptance at T2 predicted quality-of-life, at T4. Discussion: The study identified pain and adolescent pain catastrophizing as risk factors, and adolescent and parental psychological flexibility and adolescent pain acceptance as resilience factors, for long-term recovery in youths undergoing spinal fusion. Post-surgical pain management targeting these factors may therefore promote recovery for these adolescents.}}, author = {{Thorsell Cederberg, Jenny and Bartels, Sara Laureen and Thulin, Måns and Beeckman, Melanie and Wicksell, Rikard K. and Goubert, Liesbet}}, issn = {{0749-8047}}, journal = {{CLINICAL JOURNAL OF PAIN}}, keywords = {{long-term postsurgical recovery,adolescents,psychological flexibility,pain acceptance,health-related quality of life,CHRONIC POSTSURGICAL PAIN,QUALITY-OF-LIFE,PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES,POSTOPERATIVE PAIN,PSYCHOLOGICAL INFLEXIBILITY,PEDIATRIC PAIN,QUESTIONNAIRE,ACCEPTANCE,AVOIDANCE,IDENTIFICATION}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{5}}, pages = {{278--287}}, title = {{Child and parent risk and resilience factors as predictors of long-term recovery in youth undergoing spinal fusion surgery}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1097/ajp.0000000000001200}}, volume = {{40}}, year = {{2024}}, }
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