| Literature DB >> 24223756 |
Peter J Schulz1, Uwe Hartung, Silvia Riva.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This study intends to contribute to a research tradition that asks how causal attributions of illnesses affect coping behavior. Causal attributions are understood as the most important element of illness representations and coping as a means to preserve quality of life. The issue is applied to a condition so far often neglected in research on illness representations-back pain-and a third concept is added to the picture: culture. AIM: The aim of this study is (a) to explore the causal factors to which persons with back pain attribute the further course of their illness, (b) to find out whether the attributed causes are predictors of coping maxims, and (c) to find out whether cultural factors affect attributions and coping and moderate the relationship between the two.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24223756 PMCID: PMC3815301 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and illness characteristics of the sample.
| Demographic variables | N | % | Pain-related variables | N | % |
| Gender | Localization of backpain | ||||
| Male | 699 | 56 | Low back | 927 | 74 |
| Female | 560 | 44 | Neck | 564 | 45 |
| Marital status | Shoulder | 473 | 38 | ||
| Married | 711 | 56 | Other | 48 | 4 |
| Other/unknown | 548 | 44 | Intensity of back painat interview | ||
| Age | Severe (6 or 7 on0–7 scale) | 28 | 2 | ||
| 29 or younger | 205 | 16 | Medium (2–5) | 664 | 53 |
| 30–49 | 740 | 59 | Light (0–1) | 569 | 45 |
| 50 or older | 314 | 25 | Chronicity | ||
| Educational level(n = 1238) | Yes | 684 | 55 | ||
| Elementary | 62 | 5 | No | 565 | 45 |
| Vocational | 515 | 42 | |||
| Higher education | 661 | 53 | |||
| Swiss region | |||||
| German | 703 | 56 | |||
| French | 328 | 26 | |||
| Italian | 228 | 18 |
Have had back pain for more than 3 months.
More than one answer.
N = 1259 unless otherwise noted.
Factor analysis of attributed influence factors (causes) on the course of a back pain condition.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
| Emotion and mood | Job stress | Weather | Physician’s influence | Considerate physical activity | |
| My mood (short term) | .736 | ||||
| Unusual psychological strain on the job (short term) | .626 | ||||
| Unusual pressure at home (short term) | .506 | ||||
| The support I get from my personal environment (long term) | .487 | ||||
| The full moon (short term) | .460 | ||||
| Fate, whether I am lucky or not (long term) | .429 | ||||
| My fatigue (long term) | .430 | ||||
| The pressures on the job (long term) | .783 | ||||
| Unusual physical strain on the job (short term) | .543 | ||||
| Draught (short term) | .824 | ||||
| The weather (short term) | .817 | ||||
| My doctors’ competence (long term) | .819 | ||||
| The regularity with which I go and see my doctor (long term) | .677 | ||||
| Compliance with doctor’s orders (long term) | .672 | ||||
| The regularity with which I exercise (long term) | .501 | ||||
| Physical exercise (short term) | .422 | ||||
| Improper movements and/or postures | .351 |
Factor analysis of coping maxims.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
| Aspiration to improvement | Acquiescence in the condition | Continuation of one’s former life | Acceptance of blame | |
| I have concrete goals for the future, such as being able again to lift my child or to ride horseback | .748 | |||
| It is my aim to be able to do all that I could do before my troubles began | .707 | |||
| Even if people find it odd, I still do things for my back (such as sitting on a ball rather than a chair) | .700 | |||
| I can only fully take part in life again when I get rid of my back pain | .770 | |||
| As no one can see my pain, people assumedly think I simulate it | .667 | |||
| When I am in pain, it feels good to be able to talk to people about it | .631 | |||
| That my back pain gets better is a priority; my job has to take second place | .541 | |||
| I more or less have got used to my back pain; they have become part of my life | .733 | |||
| I mostly try not to have people notice I am in pain | .701 | |||
| I should avoid movements that can worsen my pain | .465 | |||
| I myself am to blame if my back pain does not get better | .824 | |||
| I feel a bit guilty for not doing more for my back | .801 |
Average factor scores of attributed causes and coping maxims by cultural group (bivariate analysis).
| German-speaking(n = 580) | French-speaking(n = 256) | Italian-speaking(n = 160) | F | p | |
| Attributed causes | |||||
| Emotion and mood | −.12a | .22b | .07ab | 12.885 | <.001 |
| Job stress | −.11a | .16b | .14b | 10.245 | <.001 |
| Physician | −.14a | .17b | .24b | 19.591 | <.001 |
| Weather | −.08a | −.06a | .40b | 18.696 | <.001 |
| Considerate physical activity | .01a | −.04a | .03a | 0.529 | ns |
| Coping maximes | (n = 583) | (n = 276) | (n = 155) | ||
| Aspiration to improvement | .09a | −.19b | .10a | 8.224 | <.001 |
| Acceptance of blame | .12a | −.29b | .00a | 16.463 | <.001 |
| Continuation of former life | −.06a | .08a | .12a | 3.085 | <.05 |
| Acquiescence in the condition | −.16a | .19b | .31b | 21.218 | <.001 |
Df = 2, 993 for the causes; df = 2, 1011 for the coping maxims. Superscripts indicate significance of pairwise comparisons in rows. Same letter means no significant difference. Based on Scheffe post-hoc tests.
Figure 1Average factor scores of coping maxims by cultural group (bivariate analysis).
Effects of attributed causes and culture on coping maxims (regression analysis).
| Dependent variable: Maxims for coping with a back pain condition | ||||
| Aspiration to improvement | Acceptance ofblame | Continuation offormer life | Acquiescence in the condition | |
| Attributed causes | ||||
| Emotion and mood | .074 | .091 # | −.060 | .234*** |
| Job stress | −.076 | −.055 | .181*** | .056 |
| Physician | .143** | −.057 | .084* | .313*** |
| Weather | −.012 | .038 | .132** | .019 |
| Considerate physical activity | .316*** | .230*** | .085* | −.079* |
| (Adj. R2) | (.153) | (.066) | (.115) | (.278) |
| Culture | ||||
| French-speaking | −.153*** | −.163*** | .023 | .059* |
| Italian-speaking | −.014 | −.032 | .001 | .093** |
| (Adj. incr. R2) | (.017) | (.023) | (−.001) | (.007) |
| Interactions | ||||
| French-speaking X | ||||
| Emotions and mood | .034 | .042 | ||
| Job stress | −.080 | |||
| Physician | .038 | |||
| Considerate physical activitiy | −.044 | .043 | ||
| Italian-speaking X | ||||
| Emotions and mood | .001 | |||
| Job stress | .138*** | .076# | ||
| Physician | −.021 | |||
| Weather | −.092* | |||
| Considerate physical activitiy | −.005 | |||
| (Adj. incr. R2) | (.010) | (−.001) | (.001) | |
(#p<.10, *p<.05, **p<.01, ***p<.001).
Alterable causes and active coping are correlated, as are unalterable causes and passive coping.
| Dependent variables: Maxims for coping with a back pain condition | |||||||
| Passive | ←–––––––––––→ | Active | |||||
| Acquiescence in the condition | Continuation of former life | Acceptance of blame | Aspiration to improvement | ||||
| Independent variables: Attributed causes | |||||||
| Weather | Unalterable | .13** | |||||
| Emotion and mood | | | .23*** | |||||
| Job stress | | | .18*** | |||||
| Physician | | | .31*** | .08* | .14** | |||
| Considerate physical activity | |Alterable | −.08* | .09* | .23*** | .32*** | ||
Table shows significant betas from Table 5.