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The behavioral management of chronic pain: Long-term follow-up with comparison groups
179
Citations
12
References
1980
Year
Pain TherapyPain DisordersLong-term EfficacyPain MedicineMental HealthPsychologyPain SyndromeSymptomatic TreatmentPain ManagementClinic TeamHealth SciencesPsychiatryMedicineNormal LivesRehabilitationChronic Pain MeasurementPain ResearchPain TreatmentAddictionPain MechanismPsychotherapyPsychopathologyBehavioral ManagementComparison Groups
To assess the long-term efficacy of an operant inpatient treatment program for severely disabled chronic pain patients, 26 treated patients were compared with 20 rejected for treatment by a clinic team and 12 who refused treatment. At follow-up ranging from 1 to 8 years, 77% of treated participants were leading normal lives without medication for pain compared to one patient in the other two groups. At time of evaluation, unsuccessfully treated patients used more medications and were higher on MMPI measures of paranoia and lower on ego-strength than successfully treated patients. Spouses of unsuccessfully treated patients had higher MMPI scores on hypochondriasis and hysteria than spouses of successfully treated patients.
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