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Pain catastrophizing predicts verbal expression among children with chronic pain and their mothers
Author(s) -
Shelby L. Langer,
Joan M. Romano,
Qimin Liu,
Rona L. Levy,
Heather Nielson,
Jonathon D. Brown
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
health psychology open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.691
H-Index - 15
ISSN - 2055-1029
DOI - 10.1177/2055102916632667
Subject(s) - pain catastrophizing , anger , psychology , clinical psychology , chronic pain , psychiatry
This study examined intra- and inter-personal associations between pain catastrophizing and verbal expression in 70 children with recurrent abdominal pain and their mothers. Participants independently completed the Pain Catastrophizing Scale. Mothers and children then talked about the child’s pain. Speech was categorized using a linguistic analysis program. Catastrophizing was positively associated with the use of negative emotion words by both mothers and children. In addition, mothers’ catastrophizing was positively associated with both mothers’ and children’s anger word usage, whereas children’s catastrophizing was inversely associated with mothers’ anger word usage. Findings extend the literature on behavioral and interpersonal aspects of catastrophizing

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