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- Tanja Hechler, Joachim Kosfelder, Silja Vocks, Theresa Mönninger, Markus Blankenburg, Michael Dobe, Alexander L Gerlach, Heide Denecke, and Boris Zernikow.
- Vodafone Foundation Institute and Chair for Children's Pain Therapy and Paediatric Palliative Care, Children's and Adolescent's Hospital, Witten/Herdecke University, Datteln, Germany. T.Hechler@kinderklinik-datteln.de
- J Pain. 2010 May 1;11(5):472-83.
UnlabelledWhile sex differences in pain-related coping have been widely reported, little is known on sex differences in changes in coping following multimodal pain treatment and how these changes relate to treatment outcome. The present prospective study therefore aimed to investigate sex differences in coping strategies between boys and girls with chronic pain prior to multimodal inpatient treatment and at 3-month follow-up. Sixty-four boys and 103 girls with various pain disorders were evaluated. Core outcomes (pain intensity and pain-related disability) and coping were assessed via validated questionnaires. At admission, boys and girls used similar coping strategies. Three months following treatment, boys and girls decreased passive pain coping and seeking social support while they maintained the degree of positive self-instruction. Girls displayed higher seeking social support than boys and of importance, only for girls, a reduction in seeking social support was related to decreases in pain intensity. In both groups, the changes in coping were related to positive treatment outcome. Results suggest that both groups may benefit from reductions in passive pain coping and seeking social support. The causal quality of this relationship remains to be determined in future studies. Gender-role expectations and family interactions may account for the sex differences demonstrated for seeking social support.PerspectiveBoys and girls with chronic pain show profound similarities in pain-related coping strategies prior and after multimodal pain treatment. The changes in coping are related to positive treatment outcomes. Sex-specific treatment strategies for changing seeking social support may need to be developed and tested for their differential efficacy in boys and girls.Copyright 2010 American Pain Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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