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Parental injustice appraisals in the context of child pain : examining the construct and criterion validity of the IEQ-Pc and IEQ-Ps
- Source :
- JOURNAL OF PAIN
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- A growing pediatric and adult literature highlights the role of injustice appraisals in adjustment to pain. However, interpersonal injustice dynamics have remained largely unexplored. The present study investigated the factor structure and criterion validity of parentally adjusted versions of the Injustice Experience Questionnaire, assessing child-oriented (IEQ-Pc) and self-oriented appraisals (IEQ-Ps) in the context of child pain. Participants were triads of healthy children (N .407, M-age = 12) and both their parents and dyads of children with chronic pain (N .319, M-age = 14) and 1 parent. In both samples, children completed measures of functional disability and quality of life (physical, emotional, social, and academic); parents completed the IEQ-Pc, IEQ-Ps, and a measure of parental catastrophizing about child pain. Across samples, a confirmatory oblique two-factor model (Severity/Irreparability-Blame/Unfairness) provided a better fit to the data compared to a one-factor model; nevertheless, the two-factor solution was considered suboptimal. A post hoc exploratory factor analysis consistently revealed 1 factor. In terms of criterion validity, the IEQ-Pc and IEQ-Ps demonstrated differential associations depending on the child's pain versus healthy status, independent of parental catastrophizing. Further, findings in the healthy sample indicated that fathers' self-oriented injustice appraisals related to lower child social function. In the clinical sample, parental child-oriented injustice appraisals related to greater child functional disability and lower physical, emotional, social, and academic function. Current findings support the unique role of parental injustice appraisals, assessed by the IEQ-Pc and IEQ-Ps, in understanding child pain, but also suggest these may only partially capture the phenomenology of parental injustice appraisals in the context of child pain. Perspective: This manuscript presents an examination of the construct and criterion validity of 2 parentally adjusted versions of the Injustice Experience Questionnaire. These measures could be valuable tools for clinicians in examining how parents respond to their child's pain as it impacts both the child's life and the parents'. (C) 2020 U.S. Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Parents
SEX-DIFFERENCES
Post hoc
Adolescent
Psychometrics
EXPLORATORY FACTOR-ANALYSIS
Social Sciences
emotion
Interpersonal communication
Factor structure
Injustice
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
SCALE DEVELOPMENT
030202 anesthesiology
Social Justice
QUALITY-OF-LIFE
Criterion validity
Medicine
Humans
Child
Children
CONFIRMATORY FACTOR-ANALYSIS
FIT INDEXES
business.industry
Catastrophization
CROSS-CULTURAL
Chronic pain
ADOLESCENT CHRONIC PAIN
Reproducibility of Results
parents
medicine.disease
Exploratory factor analysis
SIMILARITIES
PERCEIVED INJUSTICE
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Neurology
catastrophizing
Social function
Female
Neurology (clinical)
Chronic Pain
business
EXPERIENCE QUESTIONNAIRE
chronic pain
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Clinical psychology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15265900
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- JOURNAL OF PAIN
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cc18f9be3dfb21afcac222e3b9d22877