Edson College of Nursing and Health Innovation, Arizona State University, Phoenix, Arizona; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Pain. 2022 Jul;23(7):1234-1244. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2022.02.005. Epub 2022 Mar 7.
Recent studies suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic can serve as a unique psychosocial stressor that can negatively impact individuals with chronic pain. Using a large online sample in the U.S., the present study sought to investigate the impact of the pandemic on the trajectories of pain severity and interference, emotional distress (ie, anxiety and depressive symptoms), and opioid misuse behaviors across one year. Potential moderating effects of socio-demographic factors and individual differences in pain catastrophizing, pain acceptance, and sleep disturbance on outcome trajectories were also examined. Adults with chronic pain were surveyed three times across 1 year (April/May 2020 [N = 1,453]; June/July 2020 [N = 878], and May 2021 [N = 813]) via Amazon's Mechanical Turk online crowdsourcing platform. Mixed-effects growth models revealed that pain severity and interference, emotional distress, and opioid misuse behaviors did not significantly deteriorate across one year during the pandemic. None of the socio-demographic factors, pain catastrophizing, or sleep disturbance moderated outcome trajectories. However, individuals with higher pain acceptance reported greater improvement in pain severity (P< .008, 95% CI: -.0002, -.00004) and depressive symptoms (P< .001, 95% CI: -.001, -.0004) over time. Our findings suggest that the negative impact of the pandemic on pain, emotional distress, and opioid misuse behaviors is quite small overall. The outcome trajectories were also stable across different socio-demographic factors, as well as individual differences in pain catastrophizing and sleep disturbance. Nevertheless, interventions that target improvement of pain acceptance may help individuals with chronic pain be resilient during the pandemic. PERSPECTIVE: Individuals with chronic pain overall did not experience significant exacerbation of pain, emotional distress, and opioid misuse across one year during the COVID-19 pandemic. Individuals with higher pain acceptance showed greater improvement in pain severity and depressive symptoms over time during the pandemic.
最近的研究表明,新冠疫情大流行可能成为一个独特的社会心理压力源,对慢性疼痛患者产生负面影响。本研究使用美国的一个大型在线样本,旨在调查疫情对一年中疼痛严重程度和干扰、情绪困扰(即焦虑和抑郁症状)以及阿片类药物滥用行为轨迹的影响。还研究了社会人口因素以及疼痛灾难化、疼痛接受和睡眠障碍等个体差异对结果轨迹的潜在调节作用。通过亚马逊的 Mechanical Turk 在线众包平台,在一年的时间内(2020 年 4 月/5 月[N=1453];2020 年 6 月/7 月[N=878]和 2021 年 5 月[N=813])三次调查了患有慢性疼痛的成年人。混合效应增长模型显示,在疫情期间,疼痛严重程度和干扰、情绪困扰和阿片类药物滥用行为在一年内没有明显恶化。社会人口因素、疼痛灾难化或睡眠障碍均未调节结果轨迹。然而,疼痛接受程度较高的个体报告疼痛严重程度(P<.008,95%CI:-.0002,-.00004)和抑郁症状(P<.001,95%CI:-.001,-.0004)随时间的改善更大。我们的研究结果表明,疫情对疼痛、情绪困扰和阿片类药物滥用行为的负面影响总体上相当小。在不同的社会人口因素以及疼痛灾难化和睡眠障碍的个体差异方面,结果轨迹也保持稳定。然而,针对提高疼痛接受度的干预措施可能有助于慢性疼痛患者在疫情期间保持韧性。观点:在新冠疫情大流行期间,总体而言,慢性疼痛患者的疼痛、情绪困扰和阿片类药物滥用并未显著恶化。在疫情期间,疼痛接受程度较高的个体在疼痛严重程度和抑郁症状方面随时间的改善更大。