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Pain beliefs mediate relations between general resilience and dysfunction from chronic back pain
Chen,Shuanghong1; Jackson,Todd1,2
2018-11-14
Source PublicationREHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY
ABS Journal Level2
ISSN0090-5550
Volume63Issue:4Pages:604-611
Abstract

Purpose/Objective: A substantial percentage of people affected by chronic back pain maintain a high quality of life despite ongoing discomfort. Presumably, more resilient persons view pain and their capacities to manage it in a manner that mitigates pain-related dysfunction. Research Method/Design: To test this premise, 307 mainland Chinese adults with chronic back pain (189 women, 118 men) completed self-report measures of psychological resilience, pain beliefs (challenge appraisals of pain, pain self-efficacy, pain catastrophizing) and pain-related dysfunction (i.e., pain intensity, disability, affective distress, depression) within a cross-sectional research design. Results: Structural equation modeling indicated elevations in general psychological resilience were related to more frequent appraisals of pain as a challenge, higher pain self-efficacy levels, and lower pain catastrophizing levels. In turn, resilience, pain self-efficacy, and pain catastrophizing were linked to pain-related dysfunction while challenge appraisals were not. Conclusions/Implications: Together, results underscored specific pain beliefs underlying the pathway between resilience and reduced dysfunction from chronic back pain. Aside from evaluating dysfunctional expectancies (e.g., pain catastrophizing) and outcomes, practitioners and researchers should consider beliefs about personal effectiveness in managing pain within assessment and treatment protocols of chronic back pain.

KeywordChallenge Appraisals Chronic Back Pain Pain Catastrophizing Pain Self-efficacy Resilience
DOI10.1037/rep0000244
URLView the original
Indexed BySSCI
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaPsychology ; Rehabilitation
WOS SubjectPsychology, Clinical ; Rehabilitation
WOS IDWOS:000449333400013
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85053076291
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Document TypeJournal article
CollectionUniversity of Macau
Corresponding AuthorJackson,Todd
Affiliation1.Key Laboratory of Cognition and PersonalitySchool of PsychologySouthwest University,Chongqing,400715,China
2.Department of PsychologyUniversity of Macau,Taipa,999078,Macao
Corresponding Author AffilicationUniversity of Macau
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Chen,Shuanghong,Jackson,Todd. Pain beliefs mediate relations between general resilience and dysfunction from chronic back pain[J]. REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 63(4), 604-611.
APA Chen,Shuanghong., & Jackson,Todd (2018). Pain beliefs mediate relations between general resilience and dysfunction from chronic back pain. REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY, 63(4), 604-611.
MLA Chen,Shuanghong,et al."Pain beliefs mediate relations between general resilience and dysfunction from chronic back pain".REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY 63.4(2018):604-611.
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