• Pain Pract · Sep 2008

    The development of the negative pain thoughts questionnaire.

    • Ana-Maria Vranceanu, Steve Safren, James Cowan, and David Ring.
    • Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
    • Pain Pract. 2008 Sep 1;8(5):337-41.

    BackgroundCognitive processes play a pivotal role in the perception of pain intensity, pain-related disability, and response to medical treatments including surgeries. While various measures of dysfunctional pain coping exist in the literature, there is no instrument available to examine such negative cognitions in relation to perceptions of medical treatment in pain patients presenting to a surgical orthopedics practice.AimsThe purpose of this article is to report on the development and preliminary testing of the Negative Pain Thoughts Questionnaire (NPTQ).MethodsThe NPTQ is an 11-item questionnaire assessing cognitions about pain and its treatment in patients presenting to orthopedics surgical practices. It was administered to 2 samples of patients with hand and arm pain seeking medical treatment in a hospital surgical practice. Patients in the second sample also completed a measure of depression and one of disability of hand, arm, and shoulder.ResultsThe NPTQ was found to be internally consistent, and unidimensional. The NPTQ total score was found to have a moderate to high positive correlation with perceived hand, arm, and shoulder disability, and a moderate positive correlation with depression. In multivariate analyses, high scores on the NPTQ significantly predicted high perceived hand, arm, and shoulder disability, even after controlling for depression.ConclusionThis short and easily administered measure of negative pain thoughts could potentially help surgeons identify at risk patients, and facilitate referrals to cognitive behavioral therapy. This, in turn, may prevent unnecessary surgeries, may decrease healthcare costs, and prevent transition toward costly chronic pain syndrome.

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