Health Mindsets in Pediatric Chronic Headache

Author:

Caruso Alessandra12,Grolnick Wendy1,Mueller Claudia3,Kaczynski Karen24,Chang Cindy Yu-Hsing2,Lebel Alyssa25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Clark University, USA

2. Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, USA

3. Department of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, USA

4. Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, USA

5. Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, USA

Abstract

Abstract Objective Given how frequently youth with chronic headache and migraine experience setbacks in treatment, identifying factors that promote coping and resilience is critical. Mindsets have gained attention as predictors of behavior and targets of intervention across contexts, including health. Health mindsets may help to explain how children with chronic pain interpret and respond to treatment. This study evaluated whether growth health mindsets might relate to adaptive outcomes in patients with chronic pediatric headache. Methods Participants were 88 children and adolescents (ages 10–17 years) with headache or migraine contacted following an appointment at a pediatric headache clinic, and their parent. Patients rated their beliefs about health as more fixed versus growth-oriented. They were presented with vignettes depicting hypothetical treatment setbacks and instructed to reflect upon real-life setbacks. Patients completed questionnaires about their cognitive appraisals of setbacks, coping, quality of life, life satisfaction, and functional impairment. Results The higher children rated their growth health mindsets, the less likely they were to appraise setbacks as threatening and endorse quality-of-life problems. Children with higher growth mindsets reported higher life satisfaction and lower functional disability. There was also an indirect relation between children’s mindsets and coping through cognitive appraisals of setbacks as a threat, but not challenge. Conclusion This research extends the health mindsets literature by contributing preliminary evidence of health mindsets as tied to adaptive outcomes in youth with chronic headache. These findings may be of interest to clinicians and parents, as health mindsets may offer an avenue by which resilience is promoted and maladaptive appraisals are minimized.

Funder

American Psychological Association

Division 38 Graduate Student Research in General Health Psychology Award and Psi Chi

The International Honor Society in Psychology

Graduate Research Grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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