Abstract

BackgroundChronic pain and the accompanying level of disability is a healthcare crisis that reaches epidemic proportions and is now considered a world level crisis. Chronic non-specific low back pain (CNLBP) contributes a significant proportion to the chronic pain population. CNLBP occurs with overlapping psychosocial factors. This study was design to investigate specific psychosocial factors and their influence on reported disability in a population with CNLBP.MethodsThe specific psychosocial factors examined included fear, catastrophizing, depression, and pain self-efficacy. This cross-sectional correlational study investigated the mediating role between pain self-efficacy, the specific psychosocial factors, and reported disability. The study recruited 61 female and 29 male participants from physical therapy clinics. The participants were between 20-to-60 years of age and diagnosed with CNLBP. All participants completed the Fear Avoidance Belief Questionnaire, The Pain Catastrophizing Scale, The Patient Health Questionnaire-9, The Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire, and The Lumbar Oswestry Disability Index. The battery of questionnaires measured fear of physical activity, pain catastrophizing, depression, pain self-efficacy, and reported disability. Multivariate regression and mediation analyses was used to analyse the data.ResultsThe principal finding was a strong inverse relationship between pain self-efficacy and reported disability with a p-value < 0.001. Further, pain self-efficacy was considered a statistical mediator with consistent p-value < 0.001 for the specific psychosocial factors investigated within this data set. Pain self-efficacy was considered to have a mediating role between reported fear of physical activity and disability, reported pain catastrophizing and disability, and reported depression and disability. Additionally, age and reported pain levels proved to be statistically significant. Adjustments for age and pain level did not alter the role of pain self-efficacy.ConclusionThe results identified a mediating role for pain self-efficacy between the specific psychosocial factors (fear, catastrophizing, and depression) and reported disability. Pain self-efficacy plays a more significant role in the relationships between these specific psychosocial factors and reported disability with CNLBP than previously considered.

Highlights

  • Chronic pain and the accompanying level of disability is a healthcare crisis that reaches epidemic proportions and is considered a world level crisis

  • Research Question 1 (RQ1): Is there a correlational relationship between pain self-efficacy and reported disability? Research Question 2 (RQ2): Does pain self-efficacy serve as a mediating variable between fear of physical activity and reported disability? Research Question 3 (RQ3): Does pain self-efficacy serve as a mediating variable between pain catastrophizing and reported disability? Research Question 4 (RQ4): Does pain self-efficacy serve as a mediating variable between depression and reported disability?

  • The study investigated how pain self-efficacy changed the relationships between fear, catastrophizing, depression, and reported disability

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic pain and the accompanying level of disability is a healthcare crisis that reaches epidemic proportions and is considered a world level crisis. Chronic non-specific low back pain (CNLBP) contributes a significant proportion to the chronic pain population. This study was design to investigate specific psychosocial factors and their influence on reported disability in a population with CNLBP. Chronic pain and reported disability have reached epidemic proportions [1, 2]. This epidemic affects an estimated 37–41% of people worldwide and nearly 20% of Varela and Van Asselt BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders (2022) 23:21 the United States population [3,4,5]. The lack of specific treatable pathology, the passivity of current healthcare models, and dismal outcomes underscore the psychosocial factors as appreciable contributors to the development and perpetuation of chronic pain and disability. The implementation of that research falls short of sustainable outcomes [23]

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