A comparison of two measures of facial activity during pain in the newborn child.

Facial activity is strikingly visible in infants reacting to noxious events. Two measures that reduce this activity to composite events, the Neonatal Facial Coding System (NFCS) and the Facial Action Coding System (FACS), were used to examine facial expressions of 56 neonates responding to routine heel lancing for blood sampling purposes. The NFCS focuses upon a limited subset of all possible facial actions that had been identified previously as responsive to painful events, whereas the FACS is a comprehensive system that is inclusive of all facial actions. Descriptions of the facial expressions obtained from the two measurement systems were very similar, supporting the convergent validity of the shorter, more readily applied system. As well, the cluster of facial activity associated with pain in this sample, using either measure, was similar to the cluster of facial activity associated with pain in adults and other newborns, both full-term and preterm, providing construct validity for the position that the face encodes painful distress in infants and adults.

[1]  A. House Measures of interobserver agreement: Calculation formulas and distribution effects , 1981 .

[2]  K. Anand,et al.  Halothane-morphine compared with high-dose sufentanil for anesthesia and postoperative analgesia in neonatal cardiac surgery. , 1992, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  A. Fletcher Pain in the neonate. , 1987, The New England journal of medicine.

[4]  R. Barr Is this infant in pain? Caveats from the clinical setting , 1992 .

[5]  K. Craig,et al.  Genuine, suppressed and faked facial behavior during exacerbation of chronic low back pain , 1991, Pain.

[6]  Kenneth D. Craig,et al.  Pain in the preterm neonate: behavioural and physiological indices , 1993, Pain.

[7]  K. Craig,et al.  Neonatal pain perception and behavioral measurement , 1993 .

[8]  A. Murray Infant crying as an elicitor of parental behavior: an examination of two models. , 1979, Psychological bulletin.

[9]  N. Schechter The undertreatment of pain in children: an overview. , 1989, Pediatric clinics of North America.

[10]  K. Craig,et al.  Developmental changes in infant pain expression during immunization injections. , 1984, Social science & medicine.

[11]  P. McGrath,et al.  Pain in Children and Adolescents , 1988 .

[12]  Kenneth D. Craig,et al.  Pain expression in neonates: facial action and cry , 1987, Pain.

[13]  Kenneth D. Craig,et al.  Judgments of genuine, suppressed, and faked facial expressions of pain. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[14]  P. S. Zeskind,et al.  Adult perceptions of pain and hunger cries: a synchrony of arousal. , 1985, Child development.

[15]  J. Lind,et al.  The Infant Cry. A Spectrographic and Auditory Analysis , 1969 .

[16]  D B Carr,et al.  The neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and neurochemistry of pain, stress, and analgesia in newborns and children. , 1989, Pediatric clinics of North America.

[17]  S. Dworkin,et al.  Effect of temporomandibular disorder pain duration on facial expressions and verbal report of pain , 1992, Pain.

[18]  M. E. Owens Pain in infancy: Conceptual and methodological issues , 1984, Pain.

[19]  P. McGrath,et al.  Pain in Neonates , 1993 .

[20]  H. Oster,et al.  Adult Judgments and Fine-Grained Analysis of Infant Facial Expressions: Testing the Validity of A Priori Coding Formulas. , 1992 .

[21]  K. Prkachin The consistency of facial expressions of pain: a comparison across modalities , 1992, Pain.

[22]  P J McGrath,et al.  Nurses' perceptions of pain in the neonatal intensive care unit. , 1989, Journal of pain and symptom management.