Abstract

ABSTRACT Latinx individuals demonstrate significant pain-related health disparities compared to other racial/ethnic groups. Moreover, young adulthood (18–25 years of age) is a primary developmental window wherein pain-related health problems are first encountered and may be related to more severe somatic and mental health symptoms. Pain-related anxiety may be one mechanistic construct linking individual differences in the experience of pain intensity to poorer somatic experiences and mental health among Latinx young adults. Thus, the current study examined pain-related anxiety as an explanatory factor underlying the relationship between pain intensity and body vigilance, perceptions of health, worry, anxious arousal, and depressive symptoms among Latinx young adults. Participants included 401 Latinx young adults (M age = 21 years; SD = 2.02; age range: 18–25 years; 83% female) at a large, southwestern university. Results revealed that individual differences in pain intensity had a significant indirect effect on the studied somatic and negative affect variables through pain-related anxiety. These novel findings suggest future work should continue to explore pain-related anxiety in the association between the experience of pain and somatic and mental health among Latinx young adults.

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