Everyday Pain in Middle and Later Life: Associations with Daily and Momentary Present-Moment Awareness as One Key Facet of Mindfulness.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 GERONTOLOGY Canadian Journal on Aging-Revue Canadienne Du Vieillissement Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-11 DOI:10.1017/S0714980823000326
Theresa Pauly, Anna Nicol, Jennifer C Lay, Maureen C Ashe, Denis Gerstorf, Peter Graf, Wolfgang Linden, Kenneth M Madden, Atiya Mahmood, Rachel A Murphy, Christiane A Hoppmann
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Abstract

This study investigated everyday associations between one key facet of mindfulness (allocating attention to the present moment) and pain. In Study 1, 89 community-dwelling adults (33-88 years; Mage = 68.6) who had experienced a stroke provided 14 daily end-of-day present-moment awareness and pain ratings. In Study 2, 100 adults (50-85 years; Mage = 67.0 years) provided momentary present-moment awareness and pain ratings three times daily for 10 days. Multi-level models showed that higher trait present-moment awareness was linked with lower overall pain (both studies). In Study 1, participants reported less pain on days on which they indicated higher present-moment awareness. In Study 2, only individuals with no post-secondary education reported less pain in moments when they indicated higher present-moment awareness. Findings add to previous research using global retrospective pain measures by showing that present-moment awareness might correlate with reduced pain experiences, assessed close in time to when they occur.

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中年和晚年的日常痛苦:与日常和瞬间的当下意识的联系,作为正念的一个关键方面。
这项研究调查了正念的一个关键方面(将注意力集中在当下)与疼痛之间的日常联系。在研究1中,89名社区居住的成年人(33-88岁;Mage=68.6)经历过中风,提供了14个每日结束时的即时意识和疼痛评级。在研究2中,100名成年人(50-85岁;Mage=67.0岁)在10天内每天提供三次即时意识和疼痛评级。多层次模型显示,较高的特质当下意识与较低的整体疼痛有关(两项研究)。在研究1中,参与者报告说,在他们表现出较高的当下意识的日子里,疼痛减轻。在研究2中,只有没有受过中学后教育的人在表现出较高的当下意识时,才会报告疼痛减轻。研究结果补充了之前使用全球回顾性疼痛测量的研究,表明当前意识可能与疼痛体验的减少相关,并在疼痛发生时进行评估。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne du vieillissement (CJA/RCV) promotes excellence in research and disseminates the latest work of researchers in the social sciences, humanities, health and biological sciences who study the older population of Canada and other countries; informs policy debates relevant to aging through the publication of the highest quality research; seeks to improve the quality of life for Canada"s older population and for older populations in other parts of the world through the publication of research that focuses on the broad range of relevant issues from income security to family relationships to service delivery and best practices.
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