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WebMD Health News

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Pain-free pediatrics
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When I was a lad, my Uncle Max was my dentist. (Uncle Max was a no-nonsense guy. His family-famous perspective on life was, "You fill a few, you pull a few, and the years go by.")

Uncle Max was a great dentist, but he was heavy of thumb and relentless of drill. He had no thought, nor offer, of anesthesia -- local or otherwise. Throughout my childhood I grimly endured his filling every dental cavity known to man. I remember walking up the stairs to his 2nd floor office, seeing a large stain on the wall, and thinking, "The next time I see this stain, it'll all be over." But, between now and then - Hell.

Having known no other manner of dental care, when I got older and moved away I was stunned to see the care and sophistication some dentists took to minimize pain. Now, of course, my first question about a possible new dentist is: how good is s/he at pain-free dental care?

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Turns out that many pediatricians were (and are) just like Uncle Max, with nary a thought of mitigating the pain of common procedures (like immunizations, stitches, circumcisions, post operative pain, etc.).

A relatively new movement -- called "pain free pediatrics" at my home hospital * -- is acquiring sophistication and momentum. Using some well-established (and some not-so-well-established) techniques to diminish the experience of pain, the screaming of kids in our emergency room and offices has markedly decreased.

(FYI: One intriguing study suggested that babies who were denied anesthesia for their circumcision in the newborn period showed more distress with later painful procedures, such as immunizations at 2 and 4 months, than did those who had analgesia. The theory is that the early intense stress response to the unrelieved pain during circumcision somehow got physiologically ingrained and then resurfaced in all its intensity when the experience of pain recurred.)

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Here are some of the things a pediatrician can do to make the experience less painful:

In the newborn period pain is lessened by:
  • A taste of glucose water or being fed.
  • Experiencing skin-to-skin contact with the mother during the painful procedure.
  • Local anesthesia (dorsal penile block or anesthetic cream) for circumcisions.

The pain of immunizations can be lessened by:

  • Sugar water or milk during the procedure.
  • Using an anesthetic ointment or cream (like "EMLA") or a "vapo-coolant" (a blast of cool spray which temporarily numbs the area) prior to the shot.
  • Distracting the infant/child with an exciting display or by having him blow bubbles or a pinwheel.
  • Having a reassuring parental presence (most important, in my view) to distract, to soothe, and to comfort.

Your emergency room should be well versed in conscious sedation (medications which keep one awake but only dimly aware of the pain) which, in experienced hands, goes a long way to minimizing the psychic trauma of various procedures.

Inpatient facilities can provide anything from aromatherapy to pet therapy to, in one hospital, allowing the child to ride his tricycle to the operating room, to the use of patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with a computerized pump for post-operative pain.

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How do your pediatric practice, your ER, and your inpatient facility stack up? Ask! Are we talking Uncle Max redux here, or have they joined the "pain-free pediatrics" movement?

Final note to parents: I beg of you: please, please, please, do not say to your misbehaving child: "Be good or Dr. __ is going to give you a shot!" Every pediatric provider cringes when s/he hears that invocation of pediatric care as torture chamber. Better to enjoin your pediatric provider to get with the pain-free program and to say to your kids: "Finish that book and I'll take you to Dr. __, who will give you a new one to read."


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*For more on Pain Free Pediatrics:
Boston Medical Pain-Free Pediatrics

For some good resources for you and your pediatric provider:
Pediatric Pain Management Toolbox (HRSA)



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Posted by: Dr. Parker at 4/04/2007 03:14:00 PM

9 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is the dumbest thing I have read in a year...

4/06/2007 12:18:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

To anonymous--
Actually your comment is the dumbest thing I've read in a year--
Thanks, Dr. P!

4/06/2007 01:40:00 PM  
Blogger Chlorinated Nurse Hopeful said...

I think your note to parents is very important. My mom is a lab tech so she always knew the people working in the lab at the family practice clinic across from the hospital where she worked. She always turned doctors appointments into an oportunity for us to go visit Mrs. Debbie who always was so nice and sometimes gave us stickers if she had them. Instead of "Sit still or Dr. soandso will give you a shot" it was "Sit still and I'll tell Mrs. Debbie how good you were, this shot is going to help you from having to come here more often." I think it's incredibly important to start kids out early with a feeling that doctors are there to help them and not to hurt them. It's actually quite a blessing to have a doctor, not a torture to go.

4/06/2007 02:39:00 PM  
Blogger Jessica A Bruno said...

Dr. P and others:

Personally, I'm totally against this or any other vaccine without the person or parent or whomever doing a lot of research on the issue or any other issue. It doesn't have to be just for women, but men as well.

Thank you.

Jessica

4/06/2007 04:22:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Tons of research already on the existing vaccines! Better do some research on taking care of your child with whooping cough...

To Dr. P--I love all these ideas for distractions during procedures. I am a nurse at a clinic and will put these into practice so kids have an easier time. It is worth the few extra seconds!!

4/06/2007 10:46:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you Dr. P for bringing this topic to the attention of the public. As an inhospital Pediatric Nurse, we employ these techniques and use the Emla cream to try and make all invasive procedures as "pain-free" as possible. You don't have to be a medical person to know that diminishing the pain of the procedure and the pain of anticipation of the procedure is the "best medicine" for your children.

4/07/2007 08:46:00 PM  
Blogger health watch center said...

Hello Dr. Parker,

A good resourceful blog on children's health...thank you for sharing....I came across to your blogs while, was searching for health blog and found your blog very informative. I wanted to say hi...

Health Watch Center.
Self Help Zone

4/09/2007 04:28:00 AM  
Anonymous Pine Baroness said...

I can say with confidence that distraction works. My little boy just got 8 shots of Botox in his legs (CP). He never so much as winced, he was so into the puppet I had brought. The Ortho was very impressed with him.
I don't care if the medical staff think I am goofy, if it helps my son I'll do it.

On another note, we use distractions as adults all the time, we play special music, read watch tv. Also what adult would tolerate a receptionist saying "Now pay your co-pay promptly or the doctor will give you a shot?"

4/09/2007 10:59:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Emla Cream is the best for shots. Using it for all 3 of my kids. It really helps!

5/10/2007 01:14:00 PM  

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