Improving Pain Outcomes for Children and Adolescents at School via a Socio-Ecological Public Health Lens: A Strengths-Focused Interview Study With Teachers.

Paediatric & neonatal pain Pub Date : 2025-08-22 eCollection Date: 2025-09-01 DOI:10.1002/pne2.70012
Rebecca Fechner, Erin Turbitt, Emily O Wakefield, Arianne Verhagen, Joshua W Pate
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Abstract

Chronic pain in children and adolescents is widespread and negatively affects school attendance and developmental trajectories. Teachers are central to how pain (both acute and chronic) is experienced by their students because of their position as educators and social role models. Therefore, we aimed to explore how teachers make meaning from and respond to their students' pain, and identify individual and system-level strengths to guide recommendations for clinical and public health interventions for pain management in schools. We conducted a qualitative study using semi-structured individual interviews with schoolteachers using an Appreciative Inquiry approach. We analyzed our results using reflexive thematic analysis, with inductive and deductive approaches. Our analysis was based on a socio-ecological framework. We interviewed 11 teachers working in primary (n = 8), secondary schools (n = 2) and leadership (n = 1). We generated three themes to capture participant experiences: (1) The teacher-student relationship: teachers are dedicated to building a connection and have key teaching and learning skills that can support pain; (2) the school community: inclusion policy and culture can positively influence pain outcomes; and (3) societal influences: misconceptions about pain can influence how teachers perceive the reality of pain. This research enhances our comprehension of the ways in which student pain (whether acute or chronic) is experienced and responded to within the school environment. The insights gained can enrich clinical perspectives and foster collaborative efforts with educators to mitigate the adverse impacts of chronic pain on young individuals, such as increased school absenteeism and pain-related stigma.

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通过社会生态公共卫生镜头改善学校儿童和青少年的疼痛结局:一项针对教师的优势访谈研究。
慢性疼痛在儿童和青少年中很普遍,并对上学和发展轨迹产生负面影响。由于教师作为教育者和社会楷模的地位,他们对学生如何体验疼痛(无论是急性疼痛还是慢性疼痛)起着核心作用。因此,我们的目的是探讨教师如何从学生的疼痛中获得意义并做出反应,并确定个人和系统层面的优势,以指导学校疼痛管理的临床和公共卫生干预建议。我们进行了一项定性研究,采用半结构化的个人访谈,与学校教师使用欣赏式调查方法。我们分析了我们的结果使用反身性主题分析,归纳和演绎的方法。我们的分析基于社会生态框架。我们采访了11名在小学(n = 8)、中学(n = 2)和领导(n = 1)工作的教师。我们生成了三个主题来捕捉参与者的体验:(1)师生关系:教师致力于建立联系,并拥有能够支持疼痛的关键教学技能;(2)学校社区:包容政策和文化对疼痛结局有正向影响;(3)社会影响:对疼痛的误解会影响教师对疼痛现实的认知。这项研究增强了我们对学生疼痛(无论是急性的还是慢性的)在学校环境中经历和反应的方式的理解。所获得的见解可以丰富临床观点,促进与教育工作者的合作努力,以减轻慢性疼痛对年轻人的不利影响,例如增加的缺勤率和与疼痛相关的耻辱。
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