• Behav Res Ther · May 1998

    Private body consciousness, anxiety and pain symptom reports of chronic pain patients.

    • R J Ferguson and T A Ahles.
    • Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA. robert.j.ferguson@dartmouth.edu
    • Behav Res Ther. 1998 May 1;36(5):527-35.

    AbstractAn information processing model of pain symptom perception and reporting predicts that individuals prone to high levels of attentional self-focus and negative affect will report more pain than individuals low in these characteristics. Past research on college student and medical patient samples has shown that individuals high in private body consciousness (PBC), or attentional self-focus and who report higher levels of anxiety report more pain symptoms than counterparts low in PBC and anxiety. The present study examined effects of PBC and anxiety on pain reports of individuals suffering chronic pain (N = 144). Pain patients suffering chronic headache, low back pain, rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia were included in the sample. A non-pain control sample (N = 31) was also studied to examine potential differences between controls and pain patients. Results indicated that pain patients reporting high levels of PBC reported more pain, although the effects of anxiety on pain reports among pain patients was not significant. Controls did not differ from pain patients on PBC, nor did the 4 groups of pain patients differ on PBC, suggesting PBC is a dispositional variable. Implications for the importance of attentional self-focus in pain symptom reporting are discussed.

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