Society for Pediatric Pain Medicine
Better Care for Children in Pain

The Society for Pediatric Pain Medicine (SPPM) aims to advance the quality of anesthesia care and the alleviation of pain-related conditions in children.

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Question of the Month – October 2021

There is a strong evidence base for the association between sleep and pain. Researchers have grappled with the direction of causality—can sleep disturbance increase pain? Prospective studies have found evidence for sleep disturbance preceding pain exacerbations in individuals with chronic pain. Studies suggest that as little as _____ of sleep disturbance can result in increased pain.

Correct! Wrong!

Question of the Month - October 2021
Correct Answer: A. One night


Sleep is a highly complex process that is essential for recuperation, memory, emotional modulation, performance and learning.1 Disturbances in sleep have been shown to impact all areas of functioning as well as acute and chronic pain in children.2 The directionality between sleep and pain, where poor sleep results in increased pain or increased pain results in poor sleep, have been highly debated. In adult populations, more recent evidence has showed a stronger effect of poor sleep resulting in worsening pain as opposed to the bidirectional relationship that was previously thought.1 A single night of sleep deprivation in patients with arthritis resulted in increased self-reported pain.3 Further, experimental studies in healthy volunteers showed that two nights of poor sleep resulted in spontaneous bodily pain after partial sleep deprivation.3


The pediatric literature is less clear. In the acute pain setting, evidence seems to indicate that poor sleep was associated with greater next day pain.4 In youth with sickle cell disease, pain and sleep seemed to be bidirectional.5 Comorbidities and socioeconomic factors also affect sleep in children.6,7 Although further studies are needed to establish the sleep-pain relationship, poor sleep in children with pain should be addressed and improved.


References:


1. Babiloni AH, De Koninck BP, Beetz G, De Beaumont L, Martel MO, Lavigne GJ. Sleep and pain: recent insights, mechanisms, and future directions in the investigation of this relationship. Journal of Neural Transmission. 2020;127:647-660.


2. Valrie CR, Bromberg MG, Palermo T, Schanberg LE. A Systematic Review of Sleep in Pediatric Pain Populations. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2013;34(2):120-8.


3. Finan, PH, Goodin BR, Smith MT. The association of sleep and pain: an update and a path forward. J Pain. 2013;14(12): 1539-1552.


4. Rabbitts JA, Zhou C, Narayanan A, Palermo TM. Longitudinal and Temporal Associations Between Daily Pain and Sleep Patterns After major Pediatric Surgery. J Pain. 2017;18(6):656-663.


5. Fisher K, Laikin AM, Howard Sharp KM, Criddle CA, Palermo TM, Karlson CW. Temporal relationship between daily pain and actigraphy sleep patterns in pediatric sickle cell disease. J Behav Med. 2018;41(3):416-422.


6. Allen JM, Graef DM, Ehrentraut JH, Tynes BL, Crabtree VM. Sleep and Pain in Pediatric Illness: A Conceptual Review. CNS Neurosci Ther. 2016;22(11):880-893.


7. Evans S, Taub R, Tsao JCI, Meldrum M, Zeltzer LK. Sociodemographic factors in a pediatric chronic pain clinic: The roles of age, sex and minority status in pain and health characteristics. J Pain Manag. 2010;3(3):273-281.

SPPM Advocacy Committee

This committee was founded several years ago to advance the mission of pediatric patients in pain everywhere. We work with parent/patient organizations like US Pain Foundation and their Pediatric Pain Warriors Program https://pediatricpainwarrior.org and collaborate with other organizations/SIGs such as the US Association for the Study of Pain (USASP), the IASP SIG for Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. The Advocacy Committee is currently working on increasing awareness for #PainAwarenessMonth by creating short audio interviews with authors of important new articles, parents and others.

While some members of the SPPM Advocacy Committee are on the Board of Directors of the US Association for the Study of Pain (USASP), the AMA Pain and Opioid Taskforce, the AAP Section of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, and advisory committees of several parent/patient organizations the Committee needs all voices and points of view to help with these efforts. The SPPM Advocacy Committee is open to SPPM Members

If you are interested in joining, please contact Rita Agarwal at [email protected].

Pain Awareness Month – Pediatric Pain Tip Sheet

The below tip sheet reviews pediatric pain facts, provides great tips on pediatric pain management as well as resources for pediatric pain.  Click here for a printable version.

 

 

 

Pain Awareness Month – Virtual Reality In Pain Management

As part of Pain Awareness Month, we would like to highlight our current newsletter featuring a section on Virtual Reality in Pain Management. Advances in technology are showing promise in helping decrease pain in children and youth, check out four fantastic articles reviewing several strategies for implementing technology as a tool in managing pain.

CLICK HERE to read the articles.

September is Pain Awareness Month


September is Pain Awareness Month! Our Society strives for “Better Care for Children in Pain” and we are proud to raise awareness of pain in children and youth. Our president, Dr. Robert Wilder, shares a message for our membership as we kick off our campaign and spread the word that poorly treated pain in the pediatric population is unacceptable and requires our ongoing research, clinical advancements and advocacy.

Join us on social media by using hashtags:  #PedsPain & #PainAwarenessMonth. 

 

https://pedspainmedicine.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Robert-Wilder-Video.mp4

 

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Upcoming Meeting Information

SPPM 13th Annual Meeting
March 12, 2026
Sheraton Denver Downtown
Denver, CO

 

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