Chapin Heather L, Darnall Beth D, Seppala Emma M, Doty James R, Hah Jennifer M, Mackey Sean C
Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Division of Pain Medicine, Systems Neuroscience and Pain Lab, Stanford University, 1070 Arastradero Road, Suite 200, MC 5596, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA.
The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, Stanford University, 1070 Arastradero Road, 2nd Floor, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA.
J Compassionate Health Care. 2014;1. doi: 10.1186/s40639-014-0004-x. Epub 2014 Oct 27.
The emergence of anger as an important predictor of chronic pain outcomes suggests that treatments that target anger may be particularly useful within the context of chronic pain. Eastern traditions prescribe compassion cultivation to treat persistent anger. Compassion cultivation has been shown to influence emotional processing and reduce negativity bias in the contexts of emotional physical discomfort, thus suggesting it may be beneficial as a dual treatment for pain and anger. Our objective was to conduct a pilot study of a 9-week group compassion cultivation intervention in chronic pain to examine its effect on pain severity, anger, pain acceptance and pain-related interference. We also aimed to describe observer ratings provided by patients' significant others and secondary effects of the intervention.
Pilot clinical trial with repeated measures design that included a within-subjects wait-list control period. Twelve chronic pain patients completed the intervention (F= 10). Data were collected from patients at enrollment, treatment baseline and post-treatment; participant significant others contributed data at the enrollment and post-treatment time points.
In this predominantly female sample, patients had significantly reduced pain severity and anger and increased pain acceptance at post-treatment compared to treatment baseline. Significant other qualitative data corroborated patient reports for reductions in pain severity and anger.
Compassion meditation may be a useful adjunctive treatment for reducing pain severity and anger, and for increasing chronic pain acceptance. Patient reported reductions in anger were corroborated by their significant others. The significant other corroborations offer a novel contribution to the literature and highlight the observable emotional and behavioral changes in the patient participants that occurred following the compassion intervention. Future studies may further examine how anger reductions impact relationships with self and others within the context of chronic pain.
愤怒成为慢性疼痛结果的重要预测因素,这表明针对愤怒的治疗在慢性疼痛背景下可能特别有用。东方传统规定通过培养同情心来治疗持续的愤怒。研究表明,培养同情心会影响情绪处理,并减少在情绪和身体不适背景下的消极偏见,因此表明它可能作为疼痛和愤怒的双重治疗方法有益。我们的目标是对慢性疼痛患者进行一项为期9周的团体同情心培养干预的试点研究,以检查其对疼痛严重程度、愤怒、疼痛接受度和疼痛相关干扰的影响。我们还旨在描述患者重要他人提供的观察者评分以及干预的次要效果。
采用重复测量设计的试点临床试验,包括受试者内的等待列表对照期。12名慢性疼痛患者完成了干预(F = 10)。在入组、治疗基线和治疗后收集患者的数据;参与者的重要他人在入组和治疗后时间点提供数据。
在这个以女性为主的样本中,与治疗基线相比,患者在治疗后疼痛严重程度和愤怒明显降低,疼痛接受度增加。重要他人的定性数据证实了患者关于疼痛严重程度和愤怒减轻的报告。
慈悲冥想可能是一种有用的辅助治疗方法,可降低疼痛严重程度和愤怒,并提高对慢性疼痛的接受度。患者报告的愤怒减轻得到了其重要他人的证实。重要他人的证实为文献做出了新的贡献,并突出了慈悲干预后患者参与者中可观察到的情绪和行为变化。未来的研究可以进一步探讨在慢性疼痛背景下,愤怒的减少如何影响与自我和他人的关系。