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Rehabilitation psychology · Nov 2012
Attachment style is associated with perceived spouse responses and pain-related outcomes.
- Laura P Forsythe, Joan M Romano, Mark P Jensen, and Beverly E Thorn.
- Department of Psychology, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA. laura.forsythe@nih.gov
- Rehabil Psychol. 2012 Nov 1;57(4):290-300.
Purpose/ObjectiveAttachment theory can provide a heuristic model for examining factors that may influence the relationship of social context to adjustment in chronic pain. This study examined the associations of attachment style with self-reported pain behavior, pain intensity, disability, depression, and perceived spouse responses to pain behavior. We also examined whether attachment style moderates associations between perceived spouse responses and self-reported pain behavior and depressive symptoms, as well as perceived spouse responses as a mediator of these associations.MethodIndividuals with chronic pain (N = 182) completed measures of self-reported attachment style, perceived spouse responses, and pain-related criterion variables.ResultsSecure attachment was inversely associated with self-reported pain behaviors, pain intensity, disability, depressive symptoms, and perceived negative spouse responses; preoccupied and fearful attachment scores were positively associated with these variables. In multivariable regression models, both attachment style and perceived spouse responses were uniquely associated with self-reported pain behavior and depressive symptoms. Attachment style did not moderate associations between perceived spouse responses to self-reported pain behavior and pain criterion variables, but negative spouse responses partially mediated some relationships between attachment styles and pain outcomes.Conclusions/ImplicationsFindings suggest that attachment style is associated with pain-related outcomes and perceptions of spouse responses. The hypothesized moderation effects for attachment were not found; however, mediation analyses showed that perceived spouse responses may partially explain associations between attachment and adjustment to pain. Future research is needed to clarify how attachment style and the social environment affect the pain experience.PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved.
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