Anxiety, coping, and disability: A test of mediation in a pediatric chronic pain sample

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Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate pain coping as a mediator of associations between anxiety and functional disability and anxiety and somatic symptoms in adolescents with chronic pain.MethodParticipants (mean age=14.76 years, range: 12-17 years) included 280 patients (212 girls) with chronic pain who underwent multidisciplinary evaluation at a tertiary pain clinic in a northeast pediatric hospital. Patients completed measures of current pain, anxiety, active, passive, and accommodative pain coping, functional disability, and somatic symptoms.ResultsStructural equation modeling was employed. The association between anxiety and disability was fully mediated by passive coping. The association between anxiety and somatic symptoms was not mediated by coping.ConclusionsLinks between anxiety symptoms and pain-related outcomes in adolescents with chronic pain are complex. Assessing how an adolescent copes with his/her pain provides further understanding of this relationship. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Pediatric Psychology. All rights reserved.

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Kaczynski, K. J., Simons, L. E., & Claar, R. L. (2011). Anxiety, coping, and disability: A test of mediation in a pediatric chronic pain sample. Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 36(8), 932–941. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsr024

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