Lange M, Krohn-Grimberghe B, Petermann F
Zentrum für Klinische Psychologie und Rehabilitation, Universität Bremen, Grazer Str. 6, 28359 Bremen, Deutschland.
Schmerz. 2011 Feb;25(1):55-61. doi: 10.1007/s00482-010-1003-2.
Fibromyalgia shows a chronic course of the disease in most cases. Multimodal therapy has short-term effects but only intensive forms of therapy attain long-term effects. As part of an inpatient rehabilitation program a multimodal pain treatment including cognitive-behavioral therapy was conducted in order to evaluate medium-term effects.
The German pain questionnaire (DSF), the hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS-D), the chronic pain questionnaire (FESV), the short form questionnaire on indicators of rehabilitation status (IRES-24) and the self-efficacy scale (ASES-D) were distributed to 166 fibromyalgia patients (intervention group n=116; control group n=50) before and after rehabilitation as well as 6 months after treatment.
The intervention group showed better results regarding symptoms (pain intensity, anxiety, depression), state of health (somatic health, psychological well-being, functioning in everyday life) and self-efficacy.
Based on the positive medium-term effects on functioning in everyday life and self-efficacy there is evidence that patients benefit from multimodal rehabilitation programs including integrative patient education.