Arab Times

Spouse hostility may worsen chronic low back pain: study

‘Depressed’ more vulnerable

-

NEW YORK, Aug 28, (Agencies): People with chronic low back pain may feel it even more sharply if their spouses are critical and unsupporti­ve of their condition, according to a recent study.

Women back-pain sufferers and those with depressive symptoms were the most vulnerable to spousal criticism, whether the harsh attitude was just perceived or overtly expressed, the study authors report in the journal Pain, online Aug 8.

“Most studies of spouse and family interactio­ns with people with chronic pain have focused on the positive effects of adequate social support”, said lead author John Burns of Rush University in Chicago.

Negative responses seem to work in a cycle, Burns noted. Spouse criticism can lead to increased pain, even up to three hours later and patient pain such as grimacing, groaning and straining can lead to increased spouse criticism up to three hours later, Burns said he found in a prior study.

Findings

“These (new) findings point toward the harmful effects of specific negative spouse communicat­ion directed toward pain patients”, he said. They could become the basis of marital interventi­ons that directly target the reduction of criticism and hostility, he added.

For the current study, the team observed 71 couples during a 10-minute discussion about whether spouse perspectiv­es on how patients with degenerati­ve disks, spinal stenosis and herniated disks could improve the ability to cope with pain.

The discussion was intended to produce conflict, but the degree of criticism or hostility wasn’t manipulate­d, the authors note. Afterwards, the member of the couple with back pain did a 10-minute structured activity that involved sitting, standing, walking, reclining, bending and stretching to lift an object while the spouse watched.

The research team meanwhile measured overt criticism and hostility from the spouse and perceived criticism on the part of the patient, as well as the patient’s pain intensity, pain behaviors and depressive symptoms.

During the discussion, researcher­s found the goal of inducing conflict was achieved and all the patients reported feeling significan­t increases in anxiety, anger and sadness.

During the activity, patients with higher depression scores were also more likely to perceive greater spouse criticism and feel greater pain. Likewise, greater hostility from the spouse observed by the research team was associated with higher depression and pain scores for the patient.

When the researcher­s adjusted for other factors that influence pain, however, the link between spousal hostility and patient pain levels only remained statistica­lly meaningful for the women backpain patients.

“Because the study required both patient and spouse to cooperate enough to participat­e, they generally got along just fine”, Burns said. “Even with these fairly happy couples, spouses uttered enough critical and hostile comments to negatively affect patient pain and function”.

The research team was also surprised by how spouses seemed genuinely concerned about pain during the discussion and would ask whether the task would cause pain. However, those spouses also tended to give “helpful” suggestion­s to patients, which were also critical.

“Marital problems are common and often quite significan­t among patients with chronic pain, yet in most current approaches to management, these issues are often addressed inadequate­ly, if at all”, said psychologi­st Tim Smith of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City who wasn’t involved in the study.

“It is surprising­ly easy to respond to a loved one by dismissing their experience, criticizin­g them, or reacting with hostility or contempt”, said Dr Annmarie Cano of Wayne State University in Detroit, who also wasn’t involved in the study. “But these responses are painful, not only psychologi­cally but physically as well”.

Also:

The Philippine president has eaten grilled chicken, duck and eggs in public with other officials to help allay fears following the country’s first large outbreak of avian flu.

President Rodrigo Duterte, accompanie­d by his health and agricultur­e secretarie­s, traveled Monday to northern Pampanga province and feasted with his bare hands on the poultry, spread on banana leaves in a traditiona­l feast.

Authoritie­s killed more than 600,000 chickens, ducks, quails, pigeons and game fowls at the height of the outbreak this month in poultry farms in Pampanga and Nueva Ecija provinces, causing a drop in prices and consumptio­n along with misery for farm owners and workers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait