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. 2016 Jun 30:12:49-58.
doi: 10.2174/1745017901612010049. eCollection 2016.

A 13-Weeks Mindfulness Based Pain Management Program Improves Psychological Distress in Patients with Chronic Pain Compared with Waiting List Controls

Affiliations

A 13-Weeks Mindfulness Based Pain Management Program Improves Psychological Distress in Patients with Chronic Pain Compared with Waiting List Controls

Tonny Elmose Andersen et al. Clin Pract Epidemiol Ment Health. .

Abstract

Background: Eradication of pain is seldom an option in chronic pain management. Hence, mindfulness meditation has become popular in pain management.

Objective: This pilot study compared the effect of a 13-weeks cognitive behavioural therapy program with integrated mindfulness meditation (CBTm) in patients with chronic non-malignant pain with a control condition. It was hypothesised that the CBTm program would reduce pain intensity and psychological distress compared to the control condition and that level of mindfulness and acceptance both would be associated with the reduction in pain intensity and psychological distress.

Methods: A case-control design was used and data were collected from a convenience sample of 70 patients with chronic non-malignant pain. Fifty patients were consecutively recruited to the CBTm intervention and 20 patients matched waiting list controls. Assessments of clinical pain and psychological distress were performed in both groups at baseline and after 13 weeks.

Results: The CBTm program reduced depression, anxiety and pain-catastrophizing compared with the control group. Increased level of mindfulness and acceptance were associated with change in psychological distress with the exception of depression, which was only associated with change in level of mindfulness. Surprisingly, changes in level of mindfulness did not correlate with changes in acceptance.

Conclusions: The results indicate that different mechanisms are targeted with cognitive behavioural therapy and mindfulness. The finding that changes in level of mindfulness did not correlate with changes in acceptance may indicate that acceptance is not a strict prerequisite for coping with pain related distress.

Keywords: Chronic Pain; Depression; Mindfulness; Pain Catastrophizing; Psychological Distress.

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Figures

Fig. (1)
Fig. (1)
Flow diagram of the patients in the two groups participating in this study.
Fig. (2)
Fig. (2)
Mean (±SEM) depression score (HADS-D) in the treatment group (filled squares, n=50) and the control group (open squares, n=20) at baseline and follow-up. Significantly different compared with baseline (*, NK: P < 0.05) and significantly different compared with control group (†, NK: P < 0.05).
Fig. (3)
Fig. (3)
Mean (±SEM) score on the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) in the treatment group (filled squares, n=50) and the control group (open squares, n=20) at baseline and follow-up. Significantly different compared with baseline (*, NK: P < 0.05) and significantly different compared with control group (†, NK: P < 0.05).

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