Learn about the different tools and sources of information that can help assess your child's pain.
Infants and toddlers can experience longer-lasting pain from certain conditions and repeated procedures. Find out how to assess longer-lasting pain in infants and toddlers at home and in medical settings.
Discover the signs of chronic pain in an older child and how chronic pain is assessed in medical settings.
Discover how to assess acute pain in an older child (age six to 12) at home and in medical settings.
Find out how to recognize the signs of chronic pain at home and how chronic pain is assessed in medical settings.
Find out how to assess acute pain in your young child (age two to five) at home and in medical settings.
Babies can feel pain. Learn about ways pain in newborns and babies can be assessed and techniques that can help ease pain.
Discover the signs of chronic pain in a young child and how chronic pain is assessed in medical settings.
Find out how acute pain is identified and assessed, at home and in medical settings, in children not old enough to speak.
Learn about how to talk to your child about how much pain they are feeling and some strategies to help them cope with pain.
Learn about pain assessment of younger school-age children. By this age, children begin to develop a sense of cause and effect concerning their pain.
Learn to differentiate between myth and truth concerning children's pain. There are many common misconceptions of pain that should be dispelled.
Discover the signs of cancer-related pain in children and how cancer-related pain is assessed by the health-care team.
Find out how to recognize the signs of acute pain at home and how your teen's pain is assessed in medical settings.
Find out how the 3P approach to pain management can help your teen manage their chronic pain.
Learn about the process and goals of pain assessment to provide the information necessary to initiate optimal pain treatment strategies.
Learn about how we feel pain, what acute and chronic pain are and the most common causes of pain in people with sickle cell disease.
Read about various types and intensities of pain that a child may experience: acute pain, chronic pain, procedural pain, and recurrent pain.
Find out why and how you feel pain, whether from JIA or another source, such as a needle or cut, and learn the differences between acute and chronic pain.
Learn about laparoscopic surgery, a technique that uses small cuts to insert a camera and tools into the abdomen or pelvic area to perform a surgical procedure.
Find out how to treat and manage longer-lasting pain in infants.
Teens living with hemophilia can learn about pains related to their bleeds, including the difference between acute and chronic pain.
It is normal to experience some pain and discomfort after surgery, but there are ways to manage it. Find out what you can do to help manage your pain after surgery.
There are many ways to classify or categorize pain. Learn what these are and the factors that affect how much pain your child might feel.