Department of Psychology, Washington State University Vancouver, Vancouver, Washington.
Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
J Pain. 2020 Jan-Feb;21(1-2):97-107. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2019.05.016. Epub 2019 May 30.
This study aims to 1) examine the temporal influence of peer victimization on mood, sleep quality, pain, and activity limitations in clinical and community samples of youth, and 2) test mood and sleep as mediators of peer victimization-pain pathways. One hundred fifty-six adolescents (n = 74 chronic pain group) completed a week of online diary monitoring assessing their daily peer victimization experiences, negative mood, sleep quality, pain intensity, and pain-related activity limitations. In multilevel models controlling for group status, person-mean peer victimization (averaged across days) significantly predicted worse mood, pain, and activity limitations (all Ps < .01) while daily victimization predicted worse mood (P < .05). Results from within-person mediation indicated a significant indirect effect of daily peer victimization on next-day activity limitations, through daily negative mood. Results from between-person mediation indicated that negative mood significantly mediated the relation between peer victimization and pain and the relation between peer victimization and activity limitations. Peer victimization is associated with negative health indicators in clinical and community samples of youth and may exert its influence on pain and pain-related activity limitations through negative mood. PERSPECTIVE: This article examines the temporal influence of peer victimization on pain in adolescents with and without chronic pain, and examines mood and sleep quality as mechanisms linking victimization to pain. This information may be useful for pain prevention researchers as well as providers who assess and treat pain in childhood.
1)检验同伴侵害在临床和社区青少年群体中对情绪、睡眠质量、疼痛和活动受限的时间影响;2)检验情绪和睡眠作为同伴侵害与疼痛关系的中介。156 名青少年(n=74 名慢性疼痛组)完成了一周的在线日记监测,评估他们的日常同伴侵害经历、负性情绪、睡眠质量、疼痛强度和与疼痛相关的活动受限。在控制组状态的多层次模型中,个体平均同伴侵害(在几天内平均)显著预测了更差的情绪、疼痛和活动受限(所有 P<.01),而每日侵害则预测了更差的情绪(P<.05)。个体内中介的结果表明,每日同伴侵害对次日活动受限存在显著的间接影响,通过每日负性情绪。个体间中介的结果表明,负性情绪显著中介了同伴侵害与疼痛之间的关系,以及同伴侵害与活动受限之间的关系。同伴侵害与临床和社区青少年群体中的负面健康指标有关,并且可能通过负性情绪对疼痛和与疼痛相关的活动受限产生影响。观点:本文检验了同伴侵害对青少年(包括慢性疼痛和非慢性疼痛青少年)疼痛的时间影响,并检验了情绪和睡眠质量作为将侵害与疼痛联系起来的机制。这些信息可能对疼痛预防研究人员以及评估和治疗儿童疼痛的提供者有用。