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Journal Article

Citation

Chen S, Cheng Y, Zhao W, Zhang Y. J. Clin. Nurs. 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/jocn.16543

PMID

36128944

Abstract

AIM AND OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this paper is to identify a precise definition of the concept of psychological pain in the field of depressive disorder.

BACKGROUND: Psychological pain is widespread in patients with depressive disorder and plays a central role in the suicide process. However, psychological pain is currently complex and broadly defined and does not reflect the unique nature of psychological pain in depressed patients.

DESIGN: A concept analysis.

METHODS: Rodgers' evolutionary approach was used to analyse the concept of psychological pain in depressive disorders. PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, PsycINFO, Sinomed, CNKI, and Wanfang were searched and 49 articles met the inclusion criteria.

RESULTS: The key attributes of psychological pain were identified as negative affective perception, passive cognition and ineffective response, extreme behavioural tendency, and both state and trait characteristics. Antecedents included stressful life events, frustrated psychological needs, disease factors, physical factors, and negative cognitive biases. Consequences were the promotion of personal growth, enhanced meaning in life, low quality of life, barriers to treatment, high rates of psychiatric morbidity, self-harm, and suicide.

CONCLUSION: Psychological pain is a subjectively widespread, intense, and complex affective experience centered on feelings of suffering resulting from negative self-perceptions and ineffective coping based on personality traits. In addition, psychological pain has two traits: an immediate affective reflection arising from experiencing stressful life events and a persistent and stable emotional trait, respectively. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: This study provides a conceptual framework to help clinical staff expand their knowledge of psychological pain and distinguish it from related terms. Interventions should address both the antecedents and the consequences and so this study suggests that future interventions could be developed in terms of positive emotions. NO PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: This study did not recruit participants, therefore details of participants will not be involved.


Language: en

Keywords

concept analysis; depressive disorder; psychological pain

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