Literature DB >> 29474206

Dyadic differences in friendships of adolescents with chronic pain compared with pain-free peers.

Paula A Forgeron1,2, Christine T Chambers3,4,5, Janice Cohen6,7, Bruce D Dick8, G Allen Finley9,10, Christine Lamontagne11.   

Abstract

A multisite cross-sectional study was conducted to examine dyadic friendship features between adolescents with chronic pain (ACP) and their friends compared with non-pain adolescent friendship dyads and the association of these friendship features with loneliness and depressive symptoms. Participants completed a battery of standardized measures to capture friendship features (friendship quality, closeness, and perceived social support from friends) and indices of social-emotional well-being. Sixty-one same sex friendship dyads (122 adolescents) participated; 30 friendship dyads included an adolescent with chronic pain and 52 dyads were female. Adolescents with chronic pain scored significantly higher on measures of loneliness and depressive symptoms compared with all other participants. Hierarchical Multiple Regression analysis revealed that friendship features predicted loneliness and depressive symptoms. Chronic pain predicted loneliness and depressive symptoms above and beyond friendship features. Actor Partner Interdependence Modeling found perceived social support from friends had differing associations on loneliness and depressive symptoms for dyads with a chronic pain member compared with pain-free control dyads. Friendship features were associated with loneliness and depressive symptoms for adolescents, but friendship features alone did not explain loneliness and depressive symptoms for ACP. Further research is needed to understand whether pain-related social support improves loneliness and depressive symptoms for ACP. Furthermore, a more nuanced understanding of loneliness in this population is warranted. Strategies to help ACP garner needed social support from friends are needed to decrease rates of loneliness to improve long-term outcomes.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29474206     DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pain        ISSN: 0304-3959            Impact factor:   6.961


  4 in total

1.  Are They Still Friends? Friendship Stability of Adolescents With Chronic Pain: 1-Year Follow-Up.

Authors:  Paula A Forgeron; Bruce D Dick; Christine Chambers; Janice Cohen; Christine Lamontagne; Gordon Allen Finley
Journal:  Front Pain Res (Lausanne)       Date:  2022-02-01

2.  Initial Adjustment to the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Associated Shutdown in Children and Adolescents With Chronic Pain and Their Families.

Authors:  Karen J Kaczynski; Cindy Yu Hsing Chang; Justin Chimoff; Camila Koike; Charles B Berde; Deirdre E Logan; Sarah Nelson; Joe Kossowsky
Journal:  Front Pain Res (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-09-30

3.  The sands of time: Adolescents' temporal perceptions of peer relationships and autonomy in the context of living with chronic pain.

Authors:  Abigail Jones; Line Caes; Christopher Eccleston; Melanie Noel; Jeremy Gauntlett-Gilbert; Abbie Jordan
Journal:  Paediatr Neonatal Pain       Date:  2022-01-26

4.  Sustaining, Forming, and Letting Go of Friendships for Young People with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD): A Qualitative Interview-Based Study.

Authors:  Alison Rouncefield-Swales; Bernie Carter; Lucy Bray; Lucy Blake; Stephen Allen; Chris Probert; Kay Crook; Pamela Qualter
Journal:  Int J Chronic Dis       Date:  2020-09-03
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.