BMJ 2003;326:1408-1409 (28 June), doi:10.1136/bmj.326.7404.1408
Editorial
Managing chronic pain in children and adolescents
We need to address the embarrassing lack of data for this common
problem
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Recent epidemiological data have made nonsense of the prejudice that
chronic pain is a uniquely adult problem. Chronic and recurrent pain in
children and adolescents is now known to have a point prevalence of at least
15%.1 Girls report
more pain than boys, and the incidence peaks at an average age of 14 years.
The most common complaint is headache, followed by recurrent abdominal pain
and musculoskeletal
pain.2
Many of the children and adolescents with chronic and recurrent pain will
be managed effectively by the family doctor or may simply never come to
professional attention. However, a noteworthy number of children and their
families are severely affected by pain. Doctors concerned about missing a
serious underlying disease invest time and energy in investigating the child
and referring to specialists for further evaluation. During the time spent in
this "diagnostic vacuum," the child often receives little
appropriate pain management. If, as . . . [Full text of this article]
Christopher Eccleston, director
Pain Management Unit, University of Bath and Royal National Hospital for
Rheumatic Diseases NHS Trust, Bath BA2 7AY
(c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk)
Peter Malleson, professor of paediatrics
Division of Paediatric Rheumatology, University of British Columbia V6H
3V4, Canada

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