Literature DB >> 26893293

Economic Insecurity Increases Physical Pain.

Eileen Y Chou1, Bidhan L Parmar2, Adam D Galinsky3.   

Abstract

The past decade has seen a rise in both economic insecurity and frequency of physical pain. The current research reveals a causal connection between these two growing and consequential social trends. In five studies, we found that economic insecurity produced physical pain and reduced pain tolerance. In a sixth study, with data from 33,720 geographically diverse households across the United States, economic insecurity predicted consumption of over-the-counter painkillers. The link between economic insecurity and physical pain emerged when people experienced the insecurity personally (unemployment), when they were in an insecure context (they were informed that their state had a relatively high level of unemployment), and when they contemplated past and future economic insecurity. Using both experimental-causal-chain and measurement-of-mediation approaches, we also established that the psychological experience of lacking control helped generate the causal link from economic insecurity to physical pain. Meta-analyses including all of our studies testing the link from economic insecurity to physical pain revealed that this link is reliable. Overall, the findings show that it physically hurts to be economically insecure.
© The Author(s) 2016.

Entities:  

Keywords:  economic insecurity; pain; sense of control

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26893293     DOI: 10.1177/0956797615625640

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  11 in total

Review 1.  [Pain and poverty].

Authors:  D Feierabend; J Walter; R Kalff; R Reichart
Journal:  Schmerz       Date:  2018-04       Impact factor: 1.107

2.  Midlife Marital and Financial Stress and the Progression of Later-Life Health Problems for Husbands and Wives.

Authors:  Kandauda A S Wickrama; Catherine W O'Neal
Journal:  J Aging Health       Date:  2021-03-31

Review 3.  Vulvodynia.

Authors:  Sophie Bergeron; Barbara D Reed; Ursula Wesselmann; Nina Bohm-Starke
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2020-04-30       Impact factor: 52.329

4.  Financial health as a measurable social determinant of health.

Authors:  Emily Brown Weida; Pam Phojanakong; Falguni Patel; Mariana Chilton
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-05-18       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Pain and Hardship Among Older Men: Examining the Buffering Effect of Medicare Insurance Coverage.

Authors:  Gillian L Marshall; Tamara A Baker; Chiho Song; David B Miller
Journal:  Am J Mens Health       Date:  2018-04-16

6.  Midlife family financial strain, sense of control and pain in later years: An investigation of rural husbands and wives.

Authors:  Kandauda A S Wickrama; Eric T Klopack; Catherine Walker O'Neal
Journal:  Stress Health       Date:  2021-03-09       Impact factor: 3.519

7.  Resilience does not explain the dissociation between chronic pain and physical activity in South Africans living with HIV.

Authors:  Antonia L Wadley; Duncan Mitchell; Peter R Kamerman
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2016-09-13       Impact factor: 2.984

8.  The effect of acute pain on risky and intertemporal choice.

Authors:  Lina Koppel; David Andersson; India Morrison; Kinga Posadzy; Daniel Västfjäll; Gustav Tinghög
Journal:  Exp Econ       Date:  2017-02-07

9.  The Association Between Believing in Free Will and Subjective Well-Being Is Confounded by a Sense of Personal Control.

Authors:  Peter L T Gooding; Mitchell J Callan; Gethin Hughes
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-05-07

10.  The effects of poverty stereotype threat on inhibition ability in individuals from different income-level families.

Authors:  Shanshan Wang; Dong Yang
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2020-10-22       Impact factor: 2.708

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.