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
Hauptverfasser: Van Ryckeghem, Dimitri M.L., De Houwer, Jan, Van Bockstaele, Bram, Van Damme, Stefaan, De Schryver, Maarten, Crombez, Geert
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container_end_page 2706
container_issue 12
container_start_page 2700
container_title Pain (Amsterdam)
container_volume 154
creator Van Ryckeghem, Dimitri M.L.
De Houwer, Jan
Van Bockstaele, Bram
Van Damme, Stefaan
De Schryver, Maarten
Crombez, Geert
description 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.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.pain.2013.07.055
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subjects Adult
Aged
Association
Biological and medical sciences
Chronic pain
Chronic Pain - diagnosis
Chronic Pain - psychology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Implicit Association Test
Male
Middle Aged
Pain Measurement - methods
Pain Measurement - psychology
Photic Stimulation - methods
Self
Self Concept
Self Report
Somesthesis and somesthetic pathways (proprioception, exteroception, nociception)
interoception
electrolocation. Sensory receptors
Vertebrates: nervous system and sense organs
Young Adult
title Implicit associations between pain and self-schema in patients with chronic pain
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