A recent review examined how doctors and nurses can better recognize pain in children who cannot communicate verbally due to neurocognitive impairments. The review focused on tools that rely on observing a child's behavior, like facial expressions, body movements, and crying. These tools are often used in hospital settings after surgery or in intensive care.
The review found that certain established tools, like the FLACC scale and the NCCP Checklist, are widely used and considered reliable for spotting signs of pain. The evidence suggests these tools have strong clinical utility, meaning they are practical and helpful for trained healthcare teams. No specific safety concerns were reported, as these are assessment methods, not treatments.
It's important to understand this was a review of existing tools, not a new study testing them. The main caution is that these tools work best when used by observers who are properly trained and familiar with the individual child. The review emphasizes that pain assessment should be personalized. For parents and caregivers, this means that while structured tools exist to help, accurate pain recognition still depends heavily on skilled clinical judgment and knowing the child well.