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PAIN-RELATED GUILT IN LOW BACK PAIN

The Society for Back Pain Research (SBPR) Annual General Meeting: ‘Spotlight on sciatica’



Abstract

Purpose of the study and background:

Identifying mechanisms that mediate recovery is imperative to improve outcomes in low back pain (LBP). Qualitative studies suggest that guilt may be such a mechanism, but research on this concept is scarce, and reliable instruments to measure pain-related guilt are not available. We addressed this gap by developing and testing a pain-related guilt scale (PGS) for people with LBP.

Summary of the methods used and the results:

Two samples of participants with LBP completed the scale and provided data on rates of depression, anxiety, pain intensity and disability. Three factors were identified using exploratory factor analysis (n=137): ‘Social guilt’ (4 items) relating to letting down family and friends; ‘Managing condition/pain guilt’, (5 items) relating to failing to overcome and control pain; and ‘Verification of pain guilt’, (3 items) relating to the absence of objective evidence and diagnosis. This factor structure was confirmed using confirmatory factor analysis (n=288), demonstrating an adequate to good fit with the data (AGFI= 0.913, RAMSEA= 0.061). The PGS subscales positively correlated with depression, anxiety, pain intensity and disability. After controlling for depression and anxiety the majority of relationships between the PGS subscales and disability and pain intensity remained significant, suggesting that guilt shared unique variance with disability and pain intensity independent of depression and anxiety. High levels of guilt were reported by over 40% of patients.

Conclusion:

The findings suggest that pain-related guilt is common and is associated with clinical outcomes. Prospective research is needed to examine the role of guilt as a predictor, moderator and mediator of patients' outcomes.


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No conflict of interest

Part (but not substantial) of the abstract was presented at a small institutional symposium recently. We have also recently submitted substantial part of the abstract to a journal (although we do not know the outcome yet).

The study was partly funded by the British College of Osteopathic Medicine and Pain Relief Foundation; however they had no involvement in the study design, data collection, data analysis and manuscript preparation.