Journal of psychosomatic research
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Forty five elderly patients undergoing total hip replacements were assessed one day before and two days after surgery in order to explore the relationship between pre-operative anxiety and post-operative delirium. Anxiety was measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and delirium was measured by a decrease in various measures of cognitive functioning. No relationship was found and this is discussed in the light of two theories which would have predicted one. Other secondary findings are reported and discussed.
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The effects of chronic illness on marital relationships and the spouses' emotional and physical health were examined in chronic pain patients, their spouses, and a control sample of spouses of diabetic patients. Results indicated that pain patients and their spouses experienced considerable change in marital and sexual satisfaction. Patients with better marital adjustment also reported higher overall pain levels and had more solicitous and maritally satisfied spouses. ⋯ Although spouses of chronic pain patients showed no more physical symptoms than spouses of diabetics, they reported significantly more pain symptoms that were related to elevated levels of depressed mood. The results indicate that not only is chronic pain associated with problems in the marital relationship but heightened distress and physical symptoms in spouses as well. These effects are related less to the existence of a chronic pain problem per se but rather to patients' and spouses' manner of coping with the situation.
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Levels of pain, activity, marital satisfaction, and contingent reinforcement for expressions of pain and suffering were assessed in chronic pain patients. In addition, spouses' marital satisfaction, mood, life control, and self-reported responses to the patient's pain were examined. Multiple regression analyses revealed that spouse reinforcement of overt expressions of pain was significantly related to both perceived pain and activity levels of chronic pain patients. ⋯ Spouse reinforcement of pain was not associated with spouses' marital satisfaction or perception of patients' pain levels. Rather, spouse reinforcement was associated with high interference of patients' pain with spouses' lives, spouses' positive mood, spouses' perception of more life control, as well as longer duration of the pain problem. The data support the importance of the spouse as a potential source of reinforcement of pain behavior.
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All measuring instruments require further validation both in the setting for which they were designed and in other fields. The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale was designed for detection and assessment of those mood disorders in the setting of hospital medical and surgical clinics. ⋯ The opportunity is taken to assess the usefulness, in this setting of the Irritability Depression and Anxiety Scale and also of two subscales of the General Health Questionnaire, the one relating to the concept of depression and the other to the concept of anxiety. Score ranges of the latter two subscales are suggested and will require replication for confirmation of their usefulness.
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This paper describes the development and preliminary validation of a questionnaire designed to assess five attitudes considered important in the long-term adjustment of chronic pain patients. The specific subscales of the questionnaire were chosen to represent attitudes believed to influence the ways by which chronic pain patients manage their pain. Following the development of five reliable subscales, correlations of the subscales with self-reported pain behaviors and coping strategies were calculated, providing preliminary support for the concurrent validity of the instrument.