Pain and Rehabilitation Centre, and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Department of Activity and Health in Linköping, and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2023 Oct 25;24(1):840. doi: 10.1186/s12891-023-06961-2.
Despite the existing evidence regarding the interrelated relationship between pain and obesity, knowledge about patients' perspectives of this relationship is scarce, especially from patients with chronic pain and obesity after completing Interdisciplinary Pain Rehabilitation Program (IPRP).
This qualitative study expands the understanding of patients' perspectives on how chronic pain and obesity influence each other and how the two conditions affect the ability to make lifestyle changes.
A purposive sample of patients with Body Mass Index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m and who had completed an IPRP were recruited for individual semi-structured interviews. The transcribed interviews were analysed using latent content analysis and a pattern of theme and categories was constructed based on the participants' perspectives.
Sixteen patients (aged 28-63 years, 11 female, BMI 30-43 kg/m) shared their experiences of chronic pain, obesity and lifestyle changes after IPRP. The analysis revealed one overall theme (lifestyle changes are burdensome with a body broken by both pain and obesity) and four categories (pain disturbing days and nights worsens weight control, pain-related stress makes lifestyle changes harder, a painful and obese body intertwined with negative emotions and the overlooked impact of obesity on chronic pain). Most participants perceived that their pain negatively impacted their obesity, but they were uncertain whether their obesity negatively impacted their pain. Nevertheless, the participants desired and struggled to make lifestyle changes.
After IPRP, patients with chronic pain and obesity perceived difficulties with self-management and struggles with lifestyle changes. They experienced a combined burden of the two conditions. Their perspective on the unilateral relationship between pain and obesity differed from the existing evidence. Future tailored IPRPs should integrate nutritional interventions and address the knowledge gaps as well.
尽管现有证据表明疼痛和肥胖之间存在相互关联的关系,但对于患者对这种关系的看法知之甚少,尤其是在接受跨学科疼痛康复计划(IPRP)治疗后患有慢性疼痛和肥胖的患者。
本定性研究扩展了对患者对慢性疼痛和肥胖如何相互影响以及这两种情况如何影响生活方式改变能力的看法的理解。
从完成 IPRP 的患者中选择 BMI≥30kg/m2的患者进行个体半结构化访谈。对转录的访谈进行潜在内容分析,并根据参与者的观点构建主题和类别模式。
16 名患者(年龄 28-63 岁,11 名女性,BMI 30-43kg/m2)分享了他们在 IPRP 后慢性疼痛、肥胖和生活方式改变的经验。分析揭示了一个总体主题(生活方式改变很繁琐,身体被疼痛和肥胖所破坏)和四个类别(疼痛扰乱白天和黑夜,使体重控制更加困难,与疼痛相关的压力使生活方式改变更加困难,疼痛和肥胖的身体与负面情绪交织在一起,肥胖对慢性疼痛的影响被忽视)。大多数参与者认为他们的疼痛对他们的肥胖有负面影响,但他们不确定他们的肥胖是否对他们的疼痛有负面影响。尽管如此,参与者渴望并努力改变生活方式。
在 IPRP 之后,患有慢性疼痛和肥胖的患者认为自我管理困难,并且在生活方式改变方面存在困难。他们经历了两种疾病的综合负担。他们对疼痛和肥胖之间单向关系的看法与现有证据不同。未来的量身定制的 IPRP 应整合营养干预措施,并解决知识差距。