# Parent and Physician Global Assessment Discordance in Juvenile Arthritis: The Role of Pain Coping Strategies

**Authors:** Maria Backström, Anna Halttu, Maarit Tarkiainen, Ella Lehtinen, Sirja Sard, Paula Keskitalo, Kati Markula-Patjas, Katariina Rebane, Kristiina Aalto, Terhi Remes-Pakarinen, Johanna Kärki, Maiju Hietanen, Heini Pohjankoski, Katja Korkatti, Emmi Kosonen, Eliisa Löyttyniemi, Merja Malin, Liisa Kröger, Paula Vähäsalo

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jpedcp.2025.200186 · 2025-10-10

## TL;DR

This study explores why parents and doctors sometimes disagree on the severity of juvenile arthritis, finding that pain coping strategies play a key role.

## Contribution

The study identifies pain catastrophizing as a novel factor contributing to discordance in disease assessments between parents and physicians in juvenile arthritis.

## Key findings

- 17% of children and 11% of caregivers showed significant discordance in global assessments.
- Lower active joint count and higher pain assessment in children increased patient-physician discordance.
- Parent catastrophizing scores were linked to greater parent-physician discordance.

## Abstract

To evaluate the factors underlying the discordance in physicians', patients', and caregivers' perceptions of disease state in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and their caregivers in a prospective observational study.

We invited all children in 8 centers in Finland from November 2021 to March 2024 presenting with newly confirmed or suspected juvenile idiopathic arthritis and the accompanying parents to participate. Children older than 8.0 years and all the parents completed the patient and parent proxy pain and global assessment of wellbeing at 0 and 3 months and the pain coping scale at 3 months after diagnosis. The discordance between patient or parent global assessment and physician global assessment of disease activity was determined by subtracting the physician global from the patient or parent global assessment. The factors explaining discordance between the global assessments, were evaluated by a multivariable linear model.

In the study, 186 families participated. A positive or negative discordance of 30 mm or greater was seen in 17% of the children and 11% of the caregivers. In the children, the lower the active joint count (AJC) (P = .006) and the greater the pain assessment (P < .001), the greater the discordance between patient and physician global assessment. In parents, the lower the AJC (P < .001) and the higher the parent proxy pain assessment (P < .001) and catastrophizing score (P < .005), the greater the discordance between parent and physician global assessment.

The discordance between parent's and physician's global assessment is greater among parents who use catastrophizing as a pain coping strategy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** juvenile idiopathic arthritis (MONDO:0011429)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Arthritis (MESH:D001168), Pain (MESH:D010146), juvenile idiopathic arthritis (MESH:D001171)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12766085/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12766085