During the first, outgoing phase of the MSCA, the PARENT_EMPATHY core project was started at the host institute Stanford University in the Biobehavioral Pediatric Pain (BPP) lab, under the mentorship of Prof. Laura Simons. The preparation phase included refinement of the empathy paradigm, obtaining ethical approval, programming of the questionnaires and the paradigm, and the start of participant recruitment and data collection. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, research with human participants was halted for a long time and it was decided to continue data collection virtually with a focus on behavioural correlates of parent empathy. Data collection has finished now, but with substantial delays.
Our first results show that the empathy paradigm is feasible, and elicits empathic distress as well as compassion in the parents. Preliminary analyses shows that parent empathic responses are stronger for their own child compared to an unfamiliar child. In addition, an existing measure to assess empathy for pain (the Empathy for Pain Scale by Giummarra and colleagues, 2015) was adapted to be used in parents in the context of paediatric pain. Analyses support the idea that empathic distress is a key variable that explains associations between parent pain-related cognitions (e.g. worries) and their behaviour and responses (e.g. overprotectiveness, psychology flexibility), and hence may be a viable target for parent interventions.