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The spouse's adjustment to chronic pain: Cognitive and emotional factors

Andrew R. Block and Sara L. Boyer

Social Science & Medicine, 1984, vol. 19, issue 12, 1313-1317

Abstract: Recent research has demonstrated that the pain behaviors displayed by patients who have chronic pain complaints can be rewarded and maintained by the solicitous and attentive responses of spouses. The present study examines cognitive and emotional factors which may underly such solicitous responding by the spouses. In this study spouses completed a questionnaire (The Spouses' Perception of Disease--SPOD) which was designed to determine their perceptions of the patients' chronic pain syndromes. Additionally spouses completed a measure of emotional and psychological functioning (SCL-90) and a measure of marital satisfaction (Locke-Wallace Scale). The results of this study show that spouse's cognitive interpretation of the patient's chronic pain syndrome is closely associated with the spouse's emotional adjustment and marital satisfaction. Optimism, perception that the patient has a positive attitude along with few psychological problems and the perception that the patient is severely disabled all are associated with more positive emotional status in spouses. The results are discussed in terms of their implications for the rehabilitation of chronic pain patients.

Date: 1984
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