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Dive into the research topics where Rashmi P. Bhandari is active.

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Featured researches published by Rashmi P. Bhandari.


The Journal of Pain | 2017

The Effect of Pain Catastrophizing on Outcomes: A Developmental Perspective Across Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults With Chronic Pain

Amanda B. Feinstein; John A. Sturgeon; Beth D. Darnall; Ashley L. Dunn; Tom Rico; M. Kao; Rashmi P. Bhandari

Pain catastrophizing is one of the most powerful predictors of poor outcomes in youth and adults with pain; however, little is known about differential effects of pain catastrophizing on outcomes as a function of age. The current study examined the predictive value of pain catastrophizing on pain interference and pain intensity across children, adolescents, and 2 age groups of young adults with chronic pain. Cross-sectional data are presented from the adult and pediatric Collaborative Health Outcomes Information Registry (CHOIR), including measures of pain catastrophizing, pain intensity, pain interference, and emotional distress from 1,028 individuals with chronic pain. Results revealed that age moderated the relation between pain catastrophizing and pain interference, with the strength of these effects declining with age. The effect of pain catastrophizing on pain interference was strongest in adolescents and relatively weak in all 3 other groups. Emotional distress was the strongest predictor of pain interference for children, whereas pain intensity was the strongest predictor for both adult groups. Pain catastrophizing was found to predict pain intensity and, although age was a significant moderator, statistical findings were weak. Developmental considerations and clinical implications regarding the utility of the construct of pain catastrophizing across age groups are discussed. PERSPECTIVE This article explores differences in pain catastrophizing as predictors of pain interference and pain intensity across cohorts of children, adolescents, and 2 age groups of young adults. This work may stimulate further research on chronic pain from a developmental perceptive and inform developmentally tailored treatment interventions that target catastrophizing, emotional distress, and pain intensity.


Children today | 2017

A Pilot Study of Mindfulness Meditation for Pediatric Chronic Pain

Lynn Waelde; Amanda B. Feinstein; Rashmi P. Bhandari; Anya Griffin; Isabel A. Yoon; Brenda Golianu

Despite advances in psychological interventions for pediatric chronic pain, there has been little research examining mindfulness meditation for these conditions. This study presents data from a pilot clinical trial of a six-week manualized mindfulness meditation intervention offered to 20 adolescents aged 13–17 years. Measures of pain intensity, functional disability, depression and parent worry about their child’s pain were obtained at baseline and post-treatment. Results indicated no significant changes in pain or depression, however functional disability and frequency of pain functioning complaints improved with small effect sizes. Parents’ worry about child’s pain significantly decreased with a large effect size. Participants rated intervention components positively and most teens suggested that the number of sessions be increased. Three case examples illustrate mindfulness meditation effects and precautions. Mindfulness meditation shows promise as a feasible and acceptable intervention for youth with chronic pain. Future research should optimize intervention components and determine treatment efficacy.


Children today | 2017

Multi-Family Pediatric Pain Group Therapy: Capturing Acceptance and Cultivating Change

Samantha E. Huestis; Grace S. Kao; Ashley L. Dunn; Austin Hilliard; Isabel A. Yoon; Brenda Golianu; Rashmi P. Bhandari

Behavioral health interventions for pediatric chronic pain include cognitive-behavioral (CBT), acceptance and commitment (ACT), and family-based therapies, though literature regarding multi-family therapy (MFT) is sparse. This investigation examined the utility and outcomes of the Courage to Act with Pain: Teens Identifying Values, Acceptance, and Treatment Effects (CAPTIVATE) program, which included all three modalities (CBT, ACT, MFT) for youth with chronic pain and their parents. Program utility, engagement, and satisfaction were evaluated via quantitative and qualitative feedback. Pain-specific psychological, behavioral, and interpersonal processes were examined along with outcomes related to disability, quality of life, pain interference, fatigue, anxiety, and depressive symptoms. Participants indicated that CAPTIVATE was constructive, engaging, and helpful for social and family systems. Clinical and statistical improvements with large effect sizes were captured for pain catastrophizing, acceptance, and protective parenting but not family functioning. Similar effects were found for functional disability, pain interference, fatigue, anxiety, and depression. Given the importance of targeting multiple systems in the management of pediatric chronic pain, preliminary findings suggest a potential new group-based treatment option for youth and families. Next steps involve evaluating the differential effect of the program over treatment as usual, as well as specific CBT, ACT, and MFT components and processes that may affect outcomes.


Infants and Young Children | 2007

Restrictive parenting buffers head start students from stress

Rashmi P. Bhandari; Douglas Barnett


Pain | 2016

Pediatric-Collaborative Health Outcomes Information Registry (Peds-CHOIR): a learning health system to guide pediatric pain research and treatment.

Rashmi P. Bhandari; Amanda B. Feinstein; Samantha E. Huestis; Elliot J. Krane; Ashley L. Dunn; Lindsey L. Cohen; M. Kao; Beth D. Darnall; S. Mackey


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2018

Social Risk and Resilience Factors in Adolescent Chronic Pain: Examining the Role of Parents and Peers

Alexandra Ross; Laura E. Simons; Amanda B. Feinstein; Isabel A. Yoon; Rashmi P. Bhandari


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 2018

Risk and Resilience in Pediatric Pain: The Roles of Parent and Adolescent Catastrophizing and Acceptance

Amanda B. Feinstein; John A. Sturgeon; Rashmi P. Bhandari; Isabel A. Yoon; Alexandra Ross; Samantha E. Huestis; Anya Griffin; Laura E. Simons


Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma | 2018

Traumatic Stress and Pediatric Pain: Towards a Neurobiological Stress-Health Perspective

Grace S. Kao; Rashmi P. Bhandari; Samantha E. Huestis; Brenda Golianu


The Journal of Pain | 2017

(253) Risk and resilience in parent-child outcomes in pediatric pain: the interactive effects of catastrophizing and acceptance

Amanda B. Feinstein; John A. Sturgeon; Rashmi P. Bhandari; S. Huestis; Anya Griffin; Alexandra Ross; Isabel A. Yoon; Laura E. Simons


Clinical practice in pediatric psychology | 2017

Spotlight on the Pediatric Pain Psychology Special Interest Group.

Cynthia Harbeck-Weber; Ethan Benore; Rashmi P. Bhandari; Deirdre E. Logan; Gerard A. Banez

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Samantha E. Huestis

Case Western Reserve University

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