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When driving hurts: characterizing the experience and impact of driving with back pain.

Joshua SewardDespina StavrinosDavid J MooreNina AttridgeZina Trost
Published in: Scandinavian journal of pain (2021)
To our knowledge, the current study is the first to characterize driving experience specifically among individuals with CLBP, with attention to the relationship among key sensory, affective, and cognitive psychological metrics as well as self-reported driving history and behavior. The current findings reinforce multiple associations between pain and cognitive-affective variables that have been observed in literature outside the driving context, including pain intensity, anger, inattention, and behavioral disruption. Given that driving is a pervasive, potentially risky behavior that requires some form of cognitive focus and control, the current findings point to a continued need to examine these associations within this specific life context. We believe we have laid a groundwork for research considering the role of psychological pain variables in a driving performance. However, the nature of our analyses prevents any sort of causality from being inferred, and that future experimental research is warranted to better understand and explain these mechanisms underlying driving in pain while accounting for participant bias and subject interpretation.
Keyphrases
  • chronic pain
  • pain management
  • neuropathic pain
  • systematic review
  • healthcare
  • bipolar disorder
  • emergency department
  • spinal cord
  • current status
  • drug induced