Behavioral treatment of chronic pain: The spouse as a discriminative cue for pain behavior

Andrew R. Block(Brattleboro Memorial Hospital), Edwin F. Kremer(Brattleboro Memorial Hospital), Michael O. Gaylor(Brattleboro Memorial Hospital)
Pain
October 1, 1980
Cited by 220

Abstract

Twenty married chronic pain patients (pain duration > 8 mo.) consecutively admitted to a pain management program were administered a taped structured interview designed to elucidate the responses of their spouses to pain behavior. Additionally, patients were required to report their pain levels in two different observational conditions: when observed by their spouse and when observed by a "neutral observer", the ward clerk. Those patients who reported that their spouses were relatively non-solicitous in responding to pain behavior reported significantly lower pain levels in the spouse-observing condition than in the neutral-observer condition. Patients who reported that their spouses were relatively solicitous in responding to pain behavior reported marginally higher levels of pain in the spouse-observing condition than in the neutral-observer condition.


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