Pain self-efficacy and anxiety have each been shown to contribute substantially to pain intensity and pain-related disability. Although adult attachment theory has been related separately to chronic pain, anxiety, and self-efficacy, it has not before been investigated with either pain self-efficacy or anxiety in the context of chronic pain. This study investigated the interrelations between these aspects of the chronic pain experience and their relative contributions towards pain intensity and disability. A clinical sample of 152 chronic pain patients participated in this study, completing self-report measures of attachment, self-efficacy, pain intensity, and disability, prior to attending a multidisciplinary pain clinic. Results revealed t...
From his first conceptualisation of attachment theory, Bowlby recognised the relationship between at...
The fear avoidance model of chronic pain is well established for specific chronic pain groups and of...
This study tested the hypothesis derived from social pain theory (MacDonald & Leary, 2005) that pain...
Pain self-efficacy and anxiety have each been shown to contribute substantially to pain intensity an...
Attachment theory has been proposed as a framework for understanding the development of chronic pain...
Objective: Although threat and challenge appraisals of pain have been linked to both the acute and l...
The complex relationship between chronic pain and depression has long been of clinical and empirical...
It is now well established that pain is a multidimensional phenomenon, affected by a gamut of psycho...
Although insecure attachment has been associated with a range of variables linked with problematic a...
Pain is now well established as a biopsychosocial, multidimensionals phenomenon. According to the di...
Ann-Christin Pfeifer,1,2 Juan Martin Gómez Penedo,3 Johannes C Ehrenthal,2 Eva Neubauer,1 Dor...
Attachment insecurity relates to the onset and course of chronic pain via dysfunctional reactions to...
Chronic pain (CP) is a burdensome symptom. Different psychological models have been proposed to expl...
© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2013. Theoretical and empirical evidence suggests that ad...
There has been a growing interest in interpersonal factors and/or processes that are relevant to the...
From his first conceptualisation of attachment theory, Bowlby recognised the relationship between at...
The fear avoidance model of chronic pain is well established for specific chronic pain groups and of...
This study tested the hypothesis derived from social pain theory (MacDonald & Leary, 2005) that pain...
Pain self-efficacy and anxiety have each been shown to contribute substantially to pain intensity an...
Attachment theory has been proposed as a framework for understanding the development of chronic pain...
Objective: Although threat and challenge appraisals of pain have been linked to both the acute and l...
The complex relationship between chronic pain and depression has long been of clinical and empirical...
It is now well established that pain is a multidimensional phenomenon, affected by a gamut of psycho...
Although insecure attachment has been associated with a range of variables linked with problematic a...
Pain is now well established as a biopsychosocial, multidimensionals phenomenon. According to the di...
Ann-Christin Pfeifer,1,2 Juan Martin Gómez Penedo,3 Johannes C Ehrenthal,2 Eva Neubauer,1 Dor...
Attachment insecurity relates to the onset and course of chronic pain via dysfunctional reactions to...
Chronic pain (CP) is a burdensome symptom. Different psychological models have been proposed to expl...
© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2013. Theoretical and empirical evidence suggests that ad...
There has been a growing interest in interpersonal factors and/or processes that are relevant to the...
From his first conceptualisation of attachment theory, Bowlby recognised the relationship between at...
The fear avoidance model of chronic pain is well established for specific chronic pain groups and of...
This study tested the hypothesis derived from social pain theory (MacDonald & Leary, 2005) that pain...