Author, as appears in the article.: Miro, Jordi; Castarlenas, Elena; de la Vega, Rocio; Galan, Santiago; Sanchez-Rodriguez, Elisabet; Jensen, Mark P; Cane, Douglas
Department: Psicologia
URV's Author/s: Castarlenas Solé, Elena Teresa / DE LA VEGA CARRANZA, ROCÍO / GALAN ORTEGA, SANTIAGO JESÚS / Miró Martínez, Jordi / Sánchez Rodríguez, Elisabet
Keywords: Treatment outcome Surveys and questionnaires Pain willingness Pain threshold Pain measurement Pain catastrophizing Pain acceptance Middle aged Male Humans Female Fear Depression Cognitive behavioral therapy Chronic pain treatment Chronic pain Catastrophization Adult Activity engagement pain catastrophizing pain acceptance chronic pain treatment activity engagement
Abstract: © 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. Pain catastrophizing and pain acceptance have been shown to be associated with improvements after participation in cognitive behaviorally-based treatment (CBT) for chronic pain. However, it is not yet clear how important each of these factors is relative to the other. Furthermore, it is also not clear if multidisciplinary pain treatment has the same impact on the two primary dimensions of pain acceptance (activity engagement and pain willingness), and whether their role in explaining treatment outcome differs as a function of the outcomes under study. The aim of this study was to examine the relative importance of changes in pain catastrophizing, activity engagement and pain willingness as predictors of the benefits of a multidisciplinary CBT for chronic pain. 186 adults with chronic pain participated. Pain catastrophizing and activity engagement, but not pain willingness, were significantly associated with treatment outcome. Moreover, each one evidenced different patterns of associations with outcomes. Specifically, while changes in both were associated with improvements in depressive symptoms, only catastrophizing was associated with improvements in pain intensity and only activity engagement was associated with improvements in pain-related disability.
Thematic Areas: Psychology, clinical Psychology (miscellaneous) Psychology (all) Psychology Psychiatry and mental health Psicología General psychology General medicine Ciencias sociales
licence for use: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
ISSN: 01607715
Author's mail: elena.castarlenas@urv.cat elisabet.sanchez@urv.cat jordi.miro@urv.cat
Author identifier: 0000-0003-0383-2526 0000-0001-8377-1799 0000-0002-1998-6653
Record's date: 2024-10-12
Papper version: info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Link to the original source: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10865-018-9927-6
Licence document URL: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Papper original source: Journal Of Behavioral Medicine. 41 (6): 827-835
APA: Miro, Jordi; Castarlenas, Elena; de la Vega, Rocio; Galan, Santiago; Sanchez-Rodriguez, Elisabet; Jensen, Mark P; Cane, Douglas (2018). Pain catastrophizing, activity engagement and pain willingness as predictors of the benefits of multidisciplinary cognitive behaviorally-based chronic pain treatment. Journal Of Behavioral Medicine, 41(6), 827-835. DOI: 10.1007/s10865-018-9927-6
Article's DOI: 10.1007/s10865-018-9927-6
Entity: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Journal publication year: 2018
Publication Type: Journal Publications