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Escritos de Psicología (Internet)

On-line version ISSN 1989-3809Print version ISSN 1138-2635

Abstract

STURGEON, John A.  and  TAUB, Chloe J.. Pain Resilience: issues of Modeling Dynamic Adaptation in Chronic Pain. Escritos de Psicología [online]. 2016, vol.9, n.3, pp.15-27. ISSN 1989-3809.  https://dx.doi.org/10.5231/psy.writ.2016.2411.

In recent years, there has been increasing interest in processes and characteristics that may underlie resilient adaptation to chronic pain. With this recent increase in empirical inquiry, there has emerged a degree of ambiguity in terms between pain resilience and other constructs previously connected to effective pain adaptation, such as pain acceptance, psychological flexibility, and pain self-efficacy. Objectives of the current paper included reviewing recent clinical and empirical evidence in the area of chronic pain resilience and offering a synthesis of these findings, with a specific focus on issues of defining and operationalizing this construct, compared to other constructs relevant to pain adaptation. We conclude that resilience is best defined as a dynamic process related to both stable individual characteristics and contextual and state factors, such as goal contexts and affective states. Finally, the implications of this model are discussed in the context of the extant literature on psychological interventions for chronic pain.

Keywords : Psychological resilience; chronic pain; positive emotions; psychological flexibility.

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