• Psychiatry · Jan 2017

    Role of Pain-Based Catastrophizing in Pain, Disability, Distress, and Suicidal Ideation.

    • Gal Noyman-Veksler, Sheera F Lerman, Thomas E Joiner, Silviu Brill, Zvia Rudich, Hadar Shalev, and Golan Shahar.
    • Psychiatry. 2017 Jan 1; 80 (2): 155-170.

    BackgroundIn chronic pain, patients' coping affects their adaptation. In two studies, we examined the role of pain catastrophizing, a maladaptive coping strategy, in pain, distress, and disability. In Study 2 we compared catastrophizing to pain acceptance and to other coping strategies.MethodsStudy 1. Chronic pain patients (N = 428) were assessed four times as to their pain, disability, catastrophizing, and distress (depression and anxiety). Study 2. Patients (N = 165) were assessed as to coping and pain acceptance, pain, related distress, depression, hope, suicidal ideations, perceived burdensomeness, and thwarted belongingness.ResultsStudy 1. A Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) analysis revealed that Time 1 Pain-based catastrophizing prospectively predicted pain (β =.36, p < .001). Distress prospectively predicted pain related disability (β = .34, p <.001). Study 2. Pain-based catastrophizing predicted sensory pain (β = .22, p = .018), depression (β = .43, p < .001), and suicidal ideation (O.R. = 1.88), which were also predicted by depression and perceived burdensomeness. Distraction predicted sensory pain (β = .21, p = .017, respectively). Activity engagement predicted low levels of depression (β = -.29, p < .001, respectively), and willingness to accept pain predicted low pain-related distress (β = -.16, p = .05).ConclusionsPain catastro-phizing and pain acceptance constitute risk and resilience factors. Both should be assessed and targeted in pain management.

      Pubmed     Full text   Copy Citation     Plaintext  

      Add institutional full text...

    Notes

     
    Knowledge, pearl, summary or comment to share?
    300 characters remaining
    help        

    hide…