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does it predict procedural distress and response to psychological treatment among children with cancer?

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does it predict procedural distress and response to psychological treatment among children with cancer?

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OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the relationship between pain sensitivity and children’s distress during lumbar punctures (LPs), and whether pain sensitivity functions as a moderator of children’s responses to a psychological intervention aimed at reducing LP distress. METHOD: Fifty-five children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ages 3 to 18) and their parents completed a questionnaire measure of pain sensitivity. Self-report, physiological, and observed measures of distress were collected during the study baseline LP. Children were then randomized into a psychological intervention or an attention control group. Postintervention and follow-up LPs were observed. RESULTS: Higher levels of pain sensitivity were associated with greater anxiety and pain, both prior to and during the LP. Preliminary analyses indicated that pain sensitivity moderated the effects of intervention on distress. Children who were more pain-sensitive and who received no intervention showed greater increases in LP distress

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To evaluate the relationship between pain sensitivity and children’s distress during lumbar punctures (LPs), and whether pain sensitivity functions as a moderator of children’s responses to a psychological intervention aimed at reducing LP distress.

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