• J Pain Symptom Manage · Jul 2023

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Effect of Pain Coping Skills Training on Pain and Pain Medication Use for Women with Breast Cancer.

    • Hannah M Fisher, Kelly A Hyland, Joseph G Winger, Shannon N Miller, Grace H Amaden, Allison K Diachina, Sarah A Kelleher, and Tamara J Somers.
    • Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (H.M.F, K.A.H., J.G.W., S.N.F., G.H.A., A.K.D. S.A.K., T.J.S.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA. Electronic address: hannah.fisher@duke.edu.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2023 Jul 1; 66 (1): 707970-79.

    ContextPain is distressing for women with breast cancer. Pain medication may not provide full relief and can have negative side-effects. Cognitive-behavioral pain intervention protocols reduce pain severity and improve self-efficacy for pain management. These interventions' impact on pain medication use is less clear. Intervention length and coping skills use might play a role in pain outcomes.ObjectivesSecondary analysis to examine differences in pain severity, pain medication use, pain self-efficacy, and coping skill use after five- and one-session cognitive-behavioral pain intervention protocols. Pain self-efficacy and coping skills use were assessed as mediators of intervention effects on pain and pain medication use.MethodsWomen (N = 327) with stage I-III breast cancer were enrolled in a randomized trial comparing individually-delivered, five- and one-session pain coping skills training (PCST). Pain severity, pain medication use, pain self-efficacy, and coping skills use were assessed preintervention and five to eight weeks later (postintervention).ResultsPain and pain medication use significantly decreased, while pain self-efficacy increased pre-post for women randomized to both conditions (P's <.05). Five-session PCST participants demonstrated less pain (P =.03) and pain medication use (P =.04), and more pain self-efficacy (P =.02) and coping skills use (P =.04) at postintervention compared to one-session PCST participants. Pain self-efficacy mediated the relationship of intervention condition with pain and pain medication use.ConclusionBoth conditions led to improvements in pain, pain medication use, pain self-efficacy, and coping skills use, and 5-session PCST showed the greatest benefits. Brief cognitive-behavioral pain intervention improve pain outcomes, and pain self-efficacy may play a role in these effects.Copyright © 2023 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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