| Literature DB >> 27682207 |
Michael K Nicholas1, Ali Asghari1,2, Fiona M Blyth1,3,4, Bradley M Wood1, Robin Murray1, Rebecca McCabe1, Alan Brnabic5, Lee Beeston1, Mandy Corbett1, Catherine Sherrington6, Sarah Overton1.
Abstract
This study compares the outcomes, from pretreatment to 1-year follow-up, of an outpatient, CBT-based pain self-management program (PSM) that included exercises, pain education, and pain coping strategies, with a control condition (exercise-attention control, EAC) that included exercises and a control for the attention of the treatment team. We previously reported short-term results (to 1-month follow-up) from the same study. This new paper considers the important issue of maintenance of treatment-related gains. The participants (n = 141) were a heterogeneous sample of ambulant, community-dwelling older adult patients with chronic pain (mean age: 73.90 [6.5] years [range: 65-87 years]). The long-term results indicate the pain self-management program group achieved and maintained significantly better results than the exercise-attention control group on the primary outcome, pain-related disability, as well as on usual pain, pain distress, depression, and fear-avoidance beliefs. The mean effect size for these gains by the pain self-management program group over the exercise-attention control group was 0.37 (range: 0.29-0.45), which is in the small effect size range. While statistically and clinically meaningful, these findings do indicate some weakening in effects over time but not to a significant degree. The study has implications for the provision of pain management interventions for community-dwelling older adults with chronic pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27682207 DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain ISSN: 0304-3959 Impact factor: 6.961