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Needle pain is a big problem for kids. One California doctor has a plan

April Dembosky, KQED, KFF Health News on

Published in Health & Fitness

“We are taught to see pain as an unfortunate, but inevitable side effect of good treatment,” Meier said. “We learn to repress that feeling of distress at the pain we are causing because otherwise we can’t do our jobs.”

During her medical training, Meier had to hold children down for procedures, which she described as torture for them and for her. It drove her out of pediatrics. She went into geriatrics instead and later helped lead the modern movement to promote palliative care in medicine, which became an accredited specialty in the United States only in 2006.

Meier said she thinks the campaign to reduce needle pain and anxiety should be applied to everyone, not just to children.

“People with dementia have no idea why human beings are approaching them to stick needles in them,” she said. And the experience can be painful and distressing.

Friedrichsdorf’s techniques would likely work with dementia patients, too, she said. Numbing cream, distraction, something sweet in the mouth, and perhaps music from the patient’s youth that they remember and can sing along to.

 

“It’s worthy of study and it’s worthy of serious attention,” Meier said.

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This article is from a partnership that includes KQED , NPR , and KFF Health News .


©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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