Implicit associations between pain and self-schema in patients with chronic pain
Current research, using the implicit Association Test, indicates that patients with chronic pain show a stronger association between self- and pain-schema than healthy people. Chronic pain often interferes with daily functioning, and may become a threat to an individual’s sense of self. Despite the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pain (Amsterdam) 2013-12, Vol.154 (12), p.2700-2706 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Current research, using the implicit Association Test, indicates that patients with chronic pain show a stronger association between self- and pain-schema than healthy people.
Chronic pain often interferes with daily functioning, and may become a threat to an individual’s sense of self. Despite the development of a recent theoretical account focussing upon the relationship between the presence of chronic pain and a person’s self, research investigating this idea is limited. In the present study we aimed to (1) compare the strength of association between self- and pain schema in patients with chronic pain and healthy control subjects and (2) research whether the strength of association between self- and pain-schema is related to particular pain-related outcomes and individual differences of patients with chronic pain. Seventy-three patients with chronic pain (Mage=49.95; SD=9.76) and 53 healthy volunteers (Mage=48.53; SD=10.37) performed an Implicit Association Test (IAT) to assess the strength of association between pain- and self-schema. Patients with chronic pain also filled out self-report measures of pain severity, pain suffering, disability, depression, anxiety, acceptance, and helplessness. Results indicated that the pain- and self-schema were more strongly associated in patients with chronic pain than in healthy control subjects. Second, results indicated that, in patients with chronic pain, a stronger association between self- and pain-schema, as measured with the IAT, is related to a heightened level of pain severity, pain suffering, anxiety, and helplessness. Current findings give first support for the use of an IAT to investigate the strength of association between self- and pain-schema in patients with chronic pain and suggest that pain therapies may incorporate techniques that intervene on the level of self-pain enmeshment. |
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ISSN: | 0304-3959 1872-6623 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.pain.2013.07.055 |