Most children have at least some pain after an operation, which is called post-operative pain. Learn about relieving a child's post-operative pain at home.
Babies can feel pain. Learn about ways pain in newborns and babies can be assessed and techniques that can help ease pain.
Learn about the process and goals of pain assessment to provide the information necessary to initiate optimal pain treatment strategies.
Learn about techniques for pain management and the treatment of pain.
This page give advice on how to relieve a child's pain at home.
Learn about pain relief medication and how to administer it, including patient controlled analgesia.
Learn about acute and chronic pain, including signs and symptoms, methods of assessment and the 3P approach to pain management.
Discusses pain management for common childhood pain and injuries such as ear infections, colic, and injections.
Pain can be caused by cancer, procedures, treatments or symptoms of cancer and treatments. Find out how you can manage and how your health-care team can help you.
Read about pain management for children who have had heart surgery.
An overview of the components of a pain management plan for children.
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 techniques to help distract your child from, and manage, their pain in the hospital and at home.
Read about various types and intensities of pain that a child may experience: acute pain, chronic pain, procedural pain, and recurrent pain.
Read about the long-term consequences of pain on a child, the importance of a child's pain management. A discussion of pain myths is included.
There are many ways to classify or categorize pain. Learn what these are and the factors that affect how much pain you might feel.
Learn about children with pain: how pain is defined, why we feel pain, how it works and how to relieve 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.
Discover how to assess acute pain in an older child (age six to 12) at home and in medical settings.
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.
The Pain Squad™ app helps children and teens with cancer to track their pain. Find out what this app does and the benefits of using it.
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.
Learn about the different types of pain a child with cancer may experience, what causes pain and how long these types of pain last.
Learn about chronic pain in children and teens. Chronic pain is pain that lasts longer than three months and requires various pain management techniques.