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Journal Article

Citation

Thibodeau MA, Fetzner MG, Carleton RN, Kachur SS, Asmundson GJ. J. Pain 2013; 14(2): 172-181.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. Electronic address: mikethibodeau@gmail.com.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jpain.2012.10.014

PMID

23260450

Abstract

Fear of injury has been posited as crucial in pain-related anxiety and in the development of chronic pain; however, research has only measured fear of injury indirectly through other constructs (eg, fear of illness and fear of movement). The current study tested fear of injury as an independent contributor to pain-related anxiety and impairment. Patients (n = 78; 37% women) in a work-hardening treatment program for chronic low back pain completed self-report measures of pain-related anxiety, anxiety sensitivity, fear of injury, current pain, and impairment. Behavioral measures of impairment included lifting capacity, treatment outcomes, and days absent from treatment. Structural equation modeling tested the role of fear of injury within contemporary theory. Fit for the theoretical model was excellent and superior to an alternative model. Variance accounted for in pain-related anxiety by fear of injury, anxiety sensitivity, and current pain was 64%, while pain-related anxiety and current pain predicted 49% of variance in latent impairment. Fear of injury directly predicted pain-related anxiety (β = .42) and indirectly predicted impairment through pain-related anxiety (β = .19). Fear of injury may warrant theoretical and clinical consideration as an important contributor to pain-related anxiety and impairment; however, research is needed to explore how it may be causally related with other constructs. PERSPECTIVE: Fear of injury directly predicts pain-related anxiety and indirectly predicts self-reported and behavioral impairment. Fear of injury may warrant inclusion in contemporary theories of chronic pain. Clinicians may benefit from considering the construct in interventions for chronic pain.


Language: en

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