Thompson Emma L, Broadbent Jaclyn, Bertino Melanie D, Staiger Petra K
*School of Psychology, Deakin University †The Victorian Rehabilitation Centre, VIC, Australia.
Clin J Pain. 2016 Feb;32(2):164-78. doi: 10.1097/AJP.0000000000000235.
To understand how pain-related cognitions predict and influence treatment retention and adherence during and after a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program.
Electronic databases including Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Academic Search Complete, and Scopus were used to search 3 combinations of key words: chronic pain, beliefs, and treatment adherence.
The search strategy yielded 591 results, with an additional 12 studies identified through reference screening. Eighty-one full-text papers were assessed for eligibility and 10 papers met the inclusion and exclusion criteria for this review. The pain-related beliefs that have been measured in relation to treatment adherence include: pain-specific self-efficacy, perceived disability, catastrophizing, control beliefs, fear-avoidance beliefs, perceived benefits and barriers, and other less commonly measured beliefs. The most common pain-related belief investigated in relation to treatment adherence was pain-related self-efficacy. Findings for the pain-related beliefs investigated among the studies were mixed. Collectively, all of the aforementioned pain-related beliefs, excluding control beliefs, were found to influence treatment adherence behaviors.
The findings suggest that treatment adherence is determined by a combination of pain-related beliefs either supporting or inhibiting chronic pain patients' ability to adhere to treatment recommendations over time. In the studies reviewed, self-efficacy appears to be the most commonly researched predictor of treatment adherence, its effects also influencing other pain-related beliefs. More refined and standardized methodologies, consistent descriptions of pain-related beliefs, and methods of measurement will improve our understanding of adherence behaviors.
了解与疼痛相关的认知如何预测和影响多学科康复计划期间及之后的治疗持续率和依从性。
使用包括Medline、CINAHL、PsycINFO、学术搜索完整版和Scopus在内的电子数据库搜索3组关键词组合:慢性疼痛、信念和治疗依从性。
搜索策略产生了591条结果,通过参考文献筛选又确定了12项研究。对81篇全文论文进行了资格评估,10篇论文符合本综述的纳入和排除标准。已针对治疗依从性进行测量的与疼痛相关的信念包括:疼痛特异性自我效能感、感知到的残疾、灾难化、控制信念、恐惧回避信念、感知到的益处和障碍,以及其他较少测量的信念。在与治疗依从性相关的研究中,最常调查的与疼痛相关的信念是与疼痛相关的自我效能感。在这些研究中调查的与疼痛相关的信念的结果不一。总体而言,除控制信念外,所有上述与疼痛相关的信念均被发现会影响治疗依从行为。
研究结果表明,治疗依从性由一系列与疼痛相关的信念共同决定,这些信念或支持或抑制慢性疼痛患者长期坚持治疗建议的能力。在所审查的研究中,自我效能感似乎是治疗依从性最常被研究的预测因素,其影响也会波及其他与疼痛相关的信念。更精细和标准化的方法、对与疼痛相关信念的一致描述以及测量方法将增进我们对依从行为的理解。