(Press-News.org) Could adult children's strategies for coping with pain come from watching their parents react to and deal with pain? According to Suzyen Kraljevic, from the University Hospital Split in Croatia, and colleagues, a family may have a specific cognitive style of coping with pain. Their work, which looks at the relationship between how parents and their children respond to pain, is published online in Springer's International Journal of Behavioral Medicine.
It is already recognized that parents' pain behavior is associated with the way their children experience and express pain. Many of our responses are learned by observing and imitating the behavior of others, and this is true for how we express pain and find ways of coping with pain. In this context, family members are more likely to serve as models for pain-related responses than strangers.
Kraljevic and colleagues' work examines the relationship between pain catastrophizing specifically - or the exaggerated negative mental state in response to actual or anticipated pain experience - in parents and their first born child. Using a questionnaire, the researchers assessed the extent to which 285 participants were distressed in response to pain - 100 patients with chronic pain from the Pain Clinic of the University Hospital Split, 85 spouses and 100 adult children. In addition, they measured the level of actual pain experienced by the patients.
"We found that parents' pain catastrophizing scores predicted their adult children's results, irrespective of the level of actual pain experienced by the adult patients. Since during childhood parents serve as a model that children imitate, it is possible that children use social and communicative tools that they have observed in their parents, to manage their own distress in a similar context. Families may develop a specific cognitive style of dealing with pain," conclude Kraljevic and colleagues.
###
Reference
Kraljevic S et al (2011). Parents' pain catastrophizing is related to pain catastrophizing of their adult children. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine.
DOI 10.1007/s12529-011-9151-z
The full-text article is available to journalists on request.
Managing pain -- a family affair
How children cope with pain may be traced back to the way their family copes with pain
2011-04-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
EPA's draft health assessment for formaldehyde needs improvement
2011-04-12
WASHINGTON — A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency draft assessment of the potential health effects associated with formaldehyde exposure needs substantial revision, says a new report from the National Research Council, which recommends improvements for EPA's final assessment. The report finds that EPA supports its conclusions that formaldehyde can cause irritation to the eyes, nose, and throat; lesions in the respiratory tract; and genetic mutations at high concentrations. Furthermore, the report finds that the evidence is sufficient for EPA to conclude that formaldehyde ...
Periodontal stem cell transplantation shows promise
2011-04-12
Tampa, Fla. (April 11, 2011) – Periodontal ligament stem cells (PDLSCs) have been found to be the most efficacious of three kinds of clinically tested dental tissue-derived stem cells, reports a study published in the current issue of Cell Transplantation (20:2), freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/.
According to researchers in Seoul, South Korea, transplantation of PDLSCs into beagle dogs modeled with advanced periodontal (gum) disease that affected their premolars and molars, which are morphologically similar to the corresponding ...
Tourism does not harm all caves
2011-04-12
Unlike the situation in other caves, damage caused by tourists at the Águila cave in Ávila, Spain is "imperceptible", despite it receiving tens of thousands of visitors each year. This is the main conclusion of an international research study headed by the University of Alcalá (UAH), which measured heat variations in the cave.
"Despite the tens of thousands of visitors that the Águila Cave receives each year, the temperature variations in it are related to the weather outside, while the long-term impact of tourism is virtually non-existent", David Domínguez Villar, researcher ...
Foreign Translations, Inc. Wins TopTenREVIEWS Bronze Award for Translation Services
2011-04-12
In a comparison of 9 leading translation vendors, highly ranked Foreign Translations, Inc. was commended for providing "accurate translations and responsive customer service."
Foreign Translations, Inc. specializes in foreign language translation, interpreting, and website localization and offers translation services for a wide range of projects, from technical manuals, legal contracts, and marketing collateral to financial statements, training manuals, websites, and software programs.
To receive the Bronze Award, Foreign Translations, Inc. excelled in categories ...
Scientists find method to probe genes of the most common bacterial STI
2011-04-12
WHAT:
In a new study from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, scientists describe successfully mutating specific genes of Chlamydia bacteria, which cause the most common sexually transmitted infection in the United States as well as a type of blindness common in developing nations. The procedure they used will help advance scientists' understanding of how these bacteria cause human disease and expedite the development of new strategies to prevent and control these infections.
The advance could ...
New diabetes education program yields improved blood sugar control
2011-04-12
An intensive program that taught low-income, poorly educated diabetics to better manage their disease resulted in significantly improved long-term blood sugar control, according to Johns Hopkins researchers who designed and implemented the program.
The findings, published online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, offer clinicians a proven new tool to help those with poorly controlled diabetes make lifestyle changes to improve their health, the researchers says. They noted that many educational programs for people with diabetes typically have little impact and ...
Bitterness induces nausea, swallowing not required
2011-04-12
The mere taste of something extremely bitter—even if you don't swallow it at all—is enough to cause that dreaded feeling of nausea and to set your stomach churning, according to a new study reported in the April 12th issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication.
"This work shows that our body and our physiology anticipate the consequences of foods we might eat, even if those foods contain toxins or anti-nutrients," said Paul Breslin of the Monell Chemical Senses Center and Rutgers University.
Of course, it is well known that the promise of something tempting to ...
Finding may end a 30-year scientific debate
2011-04-12
A chance observation by a Queen's researcher might have ended a decades-old debate about the precise way antifreeze proteins (AFP) bind to the surface of ice crystals.
"We got a beautiful view of water bound to the ice-binding site on the protein," says Peter Davies, a professor in the Department of Biochemistry and a world leader in antifreeze protein research. "In a sense we got a lucky break."
AFPs are a class of proteins that bind to the surface of ice crystals and prevent further growth and recrystallization of ice. Fish, insects, bacteria and plants that live ...
Improve Your Foodservice Equipment Return on Investment With a Properly Conditioned Water Supply
2011-04-12
A new 600-pound cuber ice machine on average costs between $4K to $9K, while a 6-pan combi steam oven will cost about $12K to $35K. For a commercial semi-automatic espresso machine, a company has to spend between $8K to $20K. Even purchasing a 5-year old used machine, a company can expect to pay at least one-third of the new cost. With traffic only recently starting to increase after nearly a two year decline, operators have been understandably reluctant to spend on new equipment. As a result, foodservice equipment manufacturers saw a decline in sales of 15%-30%, or higher, ...
UNC study helps clarify link between high-fat diet and type 2 diabetes
2011-04-12
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – A diet high in saturated fat is a key contributor to type 2 diabetes, a major health threat worldwide. Several decades ago scientists noticed that people with type 2 diabetes have overly active immune responses, leaving their bodies rife with inflammatory chemicals.
In addition, people who acquire the disease are typically obese and are resistant to insulin, the hormone that removes sugar from the blood and stores it as energy.
For years no one has known exactly how the three characteristics are related. But a handful of studies suggest that they ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Roots in the dark: Russian scientists uncover hidden carbon dioxide uptake in plant roots
Biochar and hydrochar show contrasting climate effects in boreal grasslands
Turning trash into treasure: Scientists transform waste plastics into high-value carbon materials
Boys don’t cry? How picture books can teach gendered ideas about pain
In global collaboration, IU scientists unlock secrets to the building blocks of the universe
Young adults fear mass shootings but don’t necessarily support gun control
How unlocking ‘sticky’ chemistry may lead to better, cleaner fuels
Cutting balloon treatment prior to stent placement comparable to intravascular lithotripsy for patients with calcified coronary artery disease
Novel sirolimus-eluting balloon appears noninferior to conventional therapies for treatment of in-stent restenosis
Nearly half of US workers don’t know work experience could count toward a degree, according to University of Phoenix survey
Super-high-pressure non-compliant balloons for treatment of calcified coronary lesions noninferior to intravascular lithotripsy
Saudi Native Dr. Hani K. Najm named next vice president of the American College of Cardiology
Getting steps in one long walk a day cuts risk of death and CVD better than multiple short walks
The way you walk: 10–15 minute bouts of walking better for your cardiovascular health than shorter strolls
Beyond electronics: harnessing light for faster computing
Researchers find possible cause for increasing polarization
From soft to solid: How a coral stiffens its skeleton on demand
New software tool MARTi fast-tracks identification and response to microbial threats
Rare brain cell may hold the key to preventing schizophrenia symptoms
A new tool to find hidden ‘zombie cells’
New Cleveland Clinic research finds up to 5% of Americans carry genetic mutations associated with cancer risk
Once tadpoles lose lungs, they never get them back
Small group of users drive invasive species awareness on social media
One bad safety review can tank an Airbnb booking — Even among thousands of positive ones, new study finds
Text-based system speeds up hospital discharges to long-term care
California schools are losing tree canopy
How people learn computer programming
Exploring a mechanism of psychedelics
Scientists can now explore mechanisms behind attachment issues
Researchers watched students’ brains as they learned to program
[Press-News.org] Managing pain -- a family affairHow children cope with pain may be traced back to the way their family copes with pain




