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Pain self-efficacy moderates the association between pain and somatization in a community sample

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Abstract Background and aims Pain is a common condition. However, only a minority of people experiencing pain develop a chronic pain problem. Factors such as somatization, pain self-efficacy and lack of psychological well-being affect the risk of pain chronicity and pain-related disability. However, research on protective pain-related psychological factors in populations without chronic pain is scarce. We aim to examine if pain self-efficacy attenuates the associations between pain and both anxiety and somatization in a community sample. Methods In a cross-sectional study, 211 participants from a community sample responded to measures of average pain over the last 3 months, anxiety, somatization, and pain self-efficacy. The possibility of moderation effects were tested with a series of regression analyses. Results The association between pain and anxiety was not moderated by pain self-efficacy. In contrast, pain self-efficacy moderated the relation of pain and somatization. The interaction explained 3% of the variance in somatization, in addition to the independent effects of pain and self-efficacy (F(1,207)=5.65, p <0.025). Among those in the bottom quartile of pain self-efficacy, the association between pain and somatization was moderate or strong (r=0.62, p <0.01), whereas for those in the top quartile the association was modest (r=0.11, p >0.05). Conclusions The results are partly consistent with the hypothesis that pain self-efficacy attenuates the associations between pain and pain chronification risk factors in a relatively healthy community sample. Should further preferably longitudinal studies replicate the findings, the role pain self-efficacy as a protective factor needs to be explicated in theoretical models of pain chronification. Implications The findings are consistent with the notion that clinicians should promote patient’s pain self-efficacy in acute and sub-acute pain conditions especially when the individual is prone to somatization. However, more prominent clinical implications require studies with longitudinal designs.
Title: Pain self-efficacy moderates the association between pain and somatization in a community sample
Description:
Abstract Background and aims Pain is a common condition.
However, only a minority of people experiencing pain develop a chronic pain problem.
Factors such as somatization, pain self-efficacy and lack of psychological well-being affect the risk of pain chronicity and pain-related disability.
However, research on protective pain-related psychological factors in populations without chronic pain is scarce.
We aim to examine if pain self-efficacy attenuates the associations between pain and both anxiety and somatization in a community sample.
Methods In a cross-sectional study, 211 participants from a community sample responded to measures of average pain over the last 3 months, anxiety, somatization, and pain self-efficacy.
The possibility of moderation effects were tested with a series of regression analyses.
Results The association between pain and anxiety was not moderated by pain self-efficacy.
In contrast, pain self-efficacy moderated the relation of pain and somatization.
The interaction explained 3% of the variance in somatization, in addition to the independent effects of pain and self-efficacy (F(1,207)=5.
65, p <0.
025).
Among those in the bottom quartile of pain self-efficacy, the association between pain and somatization was moderate or strong (r=0.
62, p <0.
01), whereas for those in the top quartile the association was modest (r=0.
11, p >0.
05).
Conclusions The results are partly consistent with the hypothesis that pain self-efficacy attenuates the associations between pain and pain chronification risk factors in a relatively healthy community sample.
Should further preferably longitudinal studies replicate the findings, the role pain self-efficacy as a protective factor needs to be explicated in theoretical models of pain chronification.
Implications The findings are consistent with the notion that clinicians should promote patient’s pain self-efficacy in acute and sub-acute pain conditions especially when the individual is prone to somatization.
However, more prominent clinical implications require studies with longitudinal designs.

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