Driscoll Mary A, Higgins Diana M, Seng Elizabeth K, Buta Eugenia, Goulet Joseph L, Heapy Alicia A, Kerns Robert D, Brandt Cynthia A, Haskell Sally G
Department of Psychology, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, CT, 06516, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.
Pain Med. 2015 Jun;16(6):1101-11. doi: 10.1111/pme.12744. Epub 2015 Apr 30.
Women veterans have a higher prevalence of chronic pain relative to men. One hypothesis is that differential combat and traumatic sexual experiences and attenuated levels of social support between men and women may differentially contribute to the development and perpetuation of pain. This investigation examined [1] gender differences in trauma, social support, and family conflict among veterans with chronic pain, and [2] whether trauma, social support, and family conflict were differentially associated with pain severity, pain interference, and depressive symptom severity as a function of gender.
Participants included 460 veterans (56% female) who served in support of recent conflicts, and who endorsed pain lasting 3 months or longer. Participants completed a baseline survey during participation in a longitudinal investigation. Self-report measures included pain severity, pain interference, depressive symptom severity, exposure to traumatic life events, emotional and tangible support, and family conflict.
Relative to men, women veterans reporting chronic pain evidenced higher rates of childhood interpersonal trauma (51% vs 34%; P < 0.001) and military sexual trauma (54% vs 3%; P < 0.001), along with lower levels of combat exposure (10.00 vs 16.85, P < 0.001). Gender was found to be a moderator of the association of marital status, combat exposure, childhood interpersonal trauma, and family conflict with pain interference. It also moderated family conflict in the prediction of depressive symptoms.
Results underscore the potential importance of developing and testing gender specific models of chronic pain that consider the relative roles of trauma, social support, and family conflict.
与男性相比,女性退伍军人慢性疼痛的患病率更高。一种假设是,男性和女性在战斗经历和创伤性性经历方面存在差异,以及社会支持水平减弱,可能会对疼痛的发展和持续产生不同的影响。本研究调查了[1]慢性疼痛退伍军人在创伤、社会支持和家庭冲突方面的性别差异,以及[2]创伤、社会支持和家庭冲突是否根据性别与疼痛严重程度、疼痛干扰和抑郁症状严重程度存在不同的关联。
参与者包括460名退伍军人(56%为女性),他们曾参与近期冲突的支援行动,且认可疼痛持续3个月或更长时间。参与者在参与一项纵向调查期间完成了基线调查。自我报告测量包括疼痛严重程度、疼痛干扰、抑郁症状严重程度、经历创伤性生活事件、情感和实际支持以及家庭冲突。
与男性相比,报告有慢性疼痛的女性退伍军人童年人际创伤发生率更高(51%对34%;P<0.001),军事性创伤发生率更高(54%对3%;P<0.001),同时战斗经历水平更低(10.00对16.85,P<0.001)。研究发现,性别是婚姻状况、战斗经历、童年人际创伤和家庭冲突与疼痛干扰之间关联的调节因素。在预测抑郁症状方面,性别也调节了家庭冲突。
研究结果强调了开发和测试考虑创伤、社会支持和家庭冲突相对作用的慢性疼痛性别特异性模型的潜在重要性。