Relations (1)

related 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts

Chronic pain is the underlying condition that leads to the burden of physical symptoms and impaired daily functioning known as pain-related disability [1]. Furthermore, both concepts are linked through shared psychosocial risk factors like pain catastrophizing [2] and are frequently studied together in clinical cohorts to understand their mutual impact on patient outcomes {fact:2, fact:5}.

Facts (5)

Sources
Associations between pain intensity, psychosocial factors ... - Nature nature.com Nature 5 facts
claimIndividuals who engage in extensive pain catastrophizing tend to experience higher levels of pain intensity in the short term and are at a greater risk of developing chronic pain and pain-related disability in the long term.
claimIndividuals living with chronic pain face a burden of physical symptoms and impacts on daily functioning, which is defined as pain-related disability.
claimThe authors hypothesize that psychosocial factors, including pain catastrophizing, psychological distress, perceived injustice, insomnia, fatigue, and self-efficacy, are linked to pain-related disability in patients with chronic pain.
measurementThe study 'Associations between pain intensity, psychosocial factors, and pain-related disability in 4285 patients with chronic pain' analyzed a cohort of 4,285 patients with chronic pain.
referenceThe study titled 'Associations between pain intensity, psychosocial factors, and pain-related disability in 4285 patients with chronic pain' was published in Scientific Reports (Sci Rep) volume 14, article 13477 in 2024 by authors Landmark, L., Sunde, H.F., Fors, E.A., and others.