every single child in canada experiences pain from medical procedures, starting within hours of being born. left untreated, this pain can negatively influence their lifelong relationship with illness and medical encounters, including avoidance of routine vaccinations and preventive health checks.
nearly eight million canadians, including one out of five children, live with chronic pain, costing an estimated $40 billion per year. no one should experience preventable pain — particularly not children and youth, and especially not when simple solutions already exist.
this national pain awareness week, as the federal government works toward pharmacare legislation and as local governments and health authorities try to address critical workforce shortages in health care, we must all keep children’s health, and particularly pain care, top of mind.
pain management is a fundamental human right. yet, in canada, two out of three children experience painful medical procedures without any pain management.
despite a universal, publicly funded health-care system, canada has fallen behind globally in the quality of health care we provide to children on all fronts, ranking 30th of 41 wealthy countries for the mental and physical well-being of its children. worse, marginalized and racialized populations, including indigenous families and children with disabilities, are more likely to experience pain and less likely to receive treatment for it.