Flourishing among Children and Adolescents with Chronic Pain and Emotional, Developmental, or Behavioral Comorbidities

Author:

Foster Madeline1ORCID,Emick Jessica1ORCID,Griffith Nathan M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Fielding Graduate University, Santa Barbara, CA 93105, USA

Abstract

Pediatric chronic pain is an important public health issue given its notable impact on numerous domains of living. Pediatric chronic pain is also often comorbid with emotional, developmental, or behavioral conditions, which can lead to more severe negative outcomes and an even greater reduction in positive outcomes compared to those without comorbidities. Flourishing is a positive outcome that chronic pain status has been shown to impact. Flourishing in children aged 6–17 years living with chronic pain, as well as those with chronic pain and comorbidities, was explored using data from the 2018/2019 National Survey of Child Health. Chronic pain occurred in 4.0% of our sample, and the prevalence of chronic pain plus comorbidities was 3.9%. There were significant associations between the chronic pain condition status and all demographic variables (sex, age, race/ethnicity, poverty level, parental education, and health insurance status). The results of the hierarchical logistic regression found that the chronic pain condition status significantly predicted flourishing. Children with chronic pain were 2.33 times less likely to flourish, and children with chronic pain plus an emotional, developmental, or behavioral comorbidity were 13 times less likely to flourish than their typical peers. Given their significantly lower likelihood of flourishing, there is an urgent need for interventions targeted at children experiencing chronic pain and mental health comorbidities.

Funder

Jessica Emick’s Fielding Graduate University Faculty Research Grant provided by Fielding Graduate University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference25 articles.

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