Department Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, 1070 Arastradero Road, Suite 200, Palo Alto, CA, 94304, USA.
J Clin Psychol Med Settings. 2021 Jun;28(2):349-360. doi: 10.1007/s10880-020-09722-8.
Cumulative evidence supports the association between perceived childhood neglect and adulthood psychological and physical health. To date, pathways mediating this association remain largely unknown, though other evidence suggests that negative patterns of appraisal, including injustice perception related to pain, may be shaped by prior adverse social experiences. Consequently, the current study examined perceived injustice about chronic pain as a possible factor connecting childhood neglect and pain-related outcomes, given its relevance for both adaptation to chronic pain and to prior adverse life experiences. Patients (n = 742) visiting a tertiary pain clinic completed a survey administered via the Collaborative Health Outcomes Information Registry. Path modeling analyses were used to examine perceived injustice as a mediator of the relationships between childhood neglect and affective distress and physical function, after controlling for pain intensity and pain catastrophizing. Patients endorsing childhood neglect reported higher levels of perceived injustice and worse affective distress and physical function. Further, inclusion of perceived injustice as a mediator fully accounted for the relationship between neglect and current levels of physical function, and accounted for a significant proportion of the relationship between neglect and current levels of affective distress. These preliminary findings suggest that perceived injustice appears to be a more proximal factor by which prior experiences of neglect may adversely affect adaptation to chronic pain. Given the single-item assessment of childhood neglect and cross-sectional nature of the current findings, further research may focus on replicating these findings in longitudinal studies with validated measures and examining other adverse social experiences (e.g., abuse, social disparities) that may contribute to injustice perception and poor pain-related outcomes.
累积的证据支持童年期忽视与成年期心理和身体健康之间的关联。迄今为止,介导这种关联的途径在很大程度上仍然未知,尽管其他证据表明,包括与疼痛相关的不公正感知在内的消极评价模式可能是由先前的不良社会经历塑造的。因此,鉴于其与慢性疼痛适应和先前的不良生活经历均相关,当前研究考察了对慢性疼痛的不公平感知是否可能是将童年期忽视与疼痛相关结果联系起来的一个因素。访问三级疼痛诊所的患者(n=742)通过协作健康结果信息登记处完成了一项在线调查。在控制疼痛强度和疼痛灾难化后,使用路径建模分析来检验童年期忽视与情感困扰和身体功能之间的关系中的不公平感知是否为中介因素。报告有童年期忽视的患者报告了更高水平的不公平感知和更严重的情感困扰和身体功能障碍。此外,将不公平感知作为中介因素纳入,完全解释了忽视与当前身体功能水平之间的关系,并且解释了忽视与当前情感困扰水平之间关系的很大一部分。这些初步发现表明,不公平感知似乎是一个更接近的因素,通过它,先前的忽视经历可能会对慢性疼痛的适应产生不利影响。鉴于目前研究结果仅使用单一的童年期忽视评估和横断面研究,未来的研究可能会集中在使用经过验证的测量方法进行纵向研究中复制这些发现,并研究其他可能导致不公平感知和疼痛相关不良结果的不良社会经历(例如,虐待、社会差异)。