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Is Chronic Pain Temporal Pattern Associated with Middle-Aged and Older Adults' Perceptions of their Futures?

Gillian FennellAbby Pui Wang YipM Carrington ReidSusan EnguidanosElizabeth M ZelinskiCorinna E Löckenhoff
Published in: Health psychology bulletin (2021)
A psychological consequence of chronic pain may be an inappropriately limited future time perspective (FTP) for middle-aged and older adults. FTP is defined as one's perception of time as limited or expansive. Potentially meaningful measures, like pain temporal pattern, are often ignored in the chronic pain literature. The present study uses secondary data to assess the association between pain temporal pattern and FTP, and the moderating effect of pain duration. Among 140 individuals with chronic pain, there was no significant association between pain pattern and FTP. However, both pain-related activity interference and pain duration were associated with FTP where greater interference predicted more limited FTP ( b = -0.16, p = .03) and longer pain duration contributed to more expansive FTP ( b = 0.001, p = .03). The temporal pattern x pain duration interaction terms were non-significant. We discuss implications, limitations, and future directions of these findings.
Keyphrases
  • chronic pain
  • pain management
  • systematic review
  • neuropathic pain
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • current status
  • spinal cord injury
  • big data