Publication | Closed Access
Sex-Specific Effects of Pain-Related Anxiety on Adjustment to Chronic Pain
98
Citations
48
References
2000
Year
Results generally supported the previous laboratory-based finding indicating that an inverse relation between anxiety and adjustment to chronic pain was present only among male patients. Although male patients with high pain-related anxiety reported greater pain severity, greater interference of pain, and lower levels of daily activity than male patients with low anxiety, this effect was not present among female patients. Moreover, the effects of pain-related anxiety on adjustment to chronic pain were not attributable to either hypervigilance or use of passive coping strategies. Potential explanations and implications for the present findings are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1