Dynamics of changes in self-efficacy and locus of control expectancies in the behavioral and drug treatment of severe migraine

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Abstract

Background: Modification of expectancies (headache self-efficacy and headache locus of control) is thought to be central to the success of psychological treatments for migraine. Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine expectancy changes with various combinations of Behavioral Migraine Management and migraine drug therapies. Methods: Frequent migraine sufferers who failed to respond to 5 weeks of optimized acute migraine drug therapy were randomized to a 2 (Behavioral Migraine Management+, Behavioral Migraine Management-) × 2 (β-blocker, placebo) treatment design. Results: Mixed models for repeated measures analyses (N=176) revealed large increases in headache self-efficacy and internal headache locus of control and large decreases in chance headache locus of control with Behavioral Migraine Management+ that were maintained over a 12-month evaluation period. Chance headache locus of control and socioeconomic status moderated changes in headache self-efficacy with Behavioral Migraine Management+. Conclusions: The "deficiency" hypothesis best explained how patient characteristics influenced changes in of headache self-efficacy with Behavioral Migraine Management. © 2010 The Society of Behavioral Medicine.

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Seng, E. K., & Holroyd, K. A. (2010). Dynamics of changes in self-efficacy and locus of control expectancies in the behavioral and drug treatment of severe migraine. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 40(3), 235–247. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12160-010-9223-3

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