Journal of clinical psychology in medical settings
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J Clin Psychol Med Settings · Jun 2019
Patient Activation Mediates the Association Between Psychosocial Risk Factors and Spine Surgery Results.
Although spine surgery (SS) and spinal cord stimulators (SCSs) can provide significant relief for patients with intractable pain, their effectiveness is variable. Previously, a number of pre-operative psychosocial risk factors have predicted suboptimal outcomes of these procedures. However, recent research has found that "patient activation"-the extent to which patients are engaged and active in their own health care-can predict positive surgical results. ⋯ Bootstrapped mediation analyses indicated that patient activation mediates numerous associations between psychosocial risk factors and suboptimal outcomes. That is, patients' involvement in obtaining information, decision making, and their resilience can explain why some patients do not experience adverse surgical results when pre-surgical psychosocial risk factors are present. Pre-surgical psychological evaluations should include examination of patient strengths in addition to psychosocial risk factors, so that treatments can be appropriately individualized and the most effective surgical results obtained.