Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Fatigue and perceived injustice are both identified as psychosocial factors associated with pain-related disability in patients with chronic pain, as evidenced by [1], [2], and [3]. Furthermore, [4] directly compares the strength of their individual relationships with pain-related disability within the same study.
Facts (4)
Sources
Associations between pain intensity, psychosocial factors ... - Nature nature.com 4 facts
claimThe study conducted at Norway’s largest multidisciplinary pain clinic found significant associations between pain-related disability and pain intensity, pain catastrophizing, psychological distress, perceived injustice, sleep, fatigue, and self-efficacy.
claimPsychosocial variables investigated in the study included pain catastrophizing, psychological distress, perceived injustice, insomnia, fatigue, and self-efficacy.
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.
claimThe study found that the relationship between catastrophizing, psychological distress, perceived injustice, sleep problems, and pain-related disability was stronger than the relationship between fatigue and pain-related disability.