van der Wijk Gwen, de Groot Lisette, Bruweleit Joline, Hévizi Lilla, Edgarian Meredi S, Vermeulen Stijn, McGill Lakeya S
Department of Clinical Psychological Science, University of Maastricht, the Netherlands.
Independent Researcher & Community Partner.
medRxiv. 2025 Sep 3:2025.08.29.25334446. doi: 10.1101/2025.08.29.25334446.
Although the biopsychosocial model of chronic pain is widely recognized, few studies include social and societal factors as variables of interest, limiting our understanding of their role and importance in managing chronic pain. In the present study, we examined how social and societal factors interact with psychological factors to shape pain outcomes. We recruited 262 participants with chronic pain from the community (e.g., through the university, online distribution, GP and physiotherapist offices) to collect self-reported data about emotional states (e.g., mood symptoms, positive affect), pain coping strategies (e.g., pain acceptance, pain avoidance), social interactions (e.g., emotional support, pain invalidation), societal stressors (e.g., financial worry, access to health care) and pain outcomes (quality of life, pain disability and pain intensity). In line with previous network studies, our partial correlation network including only psychological factors showed that multiple psychological factors are uniquely associated with pain disability. We then extended the partial correlation network with social and societal factors, and demonstrated that these had strong direct relationships with quality of life, and were indirectly related to pain intensity and pain disability through pain-related worry and pain acceptance. Overall, our results indicate that social and societal factors are important for understanding pain outcomes and should thus be considered in interventions targeting chronic pain, alongside psychological factors. Future work should examine the interactions among social-societal and psychological factors in more depth to inform ways to incorporate this into individual pain management and societal interventions for chronic pain.
尽管慢性疼痛的生物心理社会模型已得到广泛认可,但很少有研究将社会和社会因素作为感兴趣的变量,这限制了我们对它们在慢性疼痛管理中的作用和重要性的理解。在本研究中,我们考察了社会和社会因素如何与心理因素相互作用以塑造疼痛结果。我们从社区招募了262名慢性疼痛患者(例如,通过大学、在线分发、全科医生和物理治疗师办公室),以收集关于情绪状态(如情绪症状、积极情绪)、疼痛应对策略(如疼痛接纳、疼痛回避)、社会互动(如情感支持、疼痛无效化)、社会压力源(如经济担忧、获得医疗保健的机会)和疼痛结果(生活质量、疼痛残疾和疼痛强度)的自我报告数据。与之前的网络研究一致,我们仅包含心理因素的偏相关网络表明,多种心理因素与疼痛残疾存在独特关联。然后,我们将社会和社会因素纳入偏相关网络,结果表明这些因素与生活质量有很强的直接关系,并通过与疼痛相关的担忧和疼痛接纳与疼痛强度和疼痛残疾间接相关。总体而言,我们的结果表明,社会和社会因素对于理解疼痛结果很重要,因此在针对慢性疼痛的干预措施中,应与心理因素一并考虑。未来的工作应更深入地研究社会 - 社会因素与心理因素之间的相互作用,以便为将其纳入个体疼痛管理和慢性疼痛的社会干预措施提供依据。