Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association
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Strategic self-presentation (SSP) is rooted in cognitive dissonance and self-perception theories, and holds that when a person presents him/herself as having certain attributes and publicly commits to having these attributes, then he or she may then begin to behave consistently with that presentation. SSP principles were integrated into an interdisciplinary chronic pain program to test whether self-presentation as a "good coper" made in a public context would increase pre- to posttreatment gains on measures of pain severity, interference, activity level, depression, pain self-efficacy, and coping. ⋯ Results imply that publicly committing to coping well with chronic pain enhances adjustment to pain relative to other commitment conditions.