Functional Limitations Mediate the Relationship Between Pain and Depressive Symptoms in Former NFL Athletes

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Abstract

The objective of this study was to analyze data from the National Football League Player Care Foundation Study of Retired NFL Players to understand potential risks for depressive symptoms in former athletes by investigating the relationship between pain and depressive symptoms in a multivariate context, while simultaneously exploring the potential connection with functional limitations. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the study sample and to conduct bivariate comparisons by race and age cohort. Linear regression models were conducted in the subsample of respondents reporting on depressive symptoms using the PHQ-9. Models examine the relationship of bodily pain, injury as a reason for retirement or not re-signing with a team, length of NFL career, sociodemographic characteristics, chronic conditions, and functional limitations to depression. Interaction terms tested whether race and age moderated the effect of bodily pain and functional limitations on depressive symptoms. Bivariate associations revealed no significant differences between younger and older former players in indicators of pain and only slightly higher functional limitations among younger former players. In the multivariate models, pain was significantly associated with depressive symptoms (β = 0.36; p

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APA

Turner, R. W., Sonnega, A., Cupery, T., Chodosh, J., Whitfield, K. E., Weir, D., & Jackson, J. S. (2019). Functional Limitations Mediate the Relationship Between Pain and Depressive Symptoms in Former NFL Athletes. American Journal of Men’s Health, 13(5). https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988319876825

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