Beyond solicitousness: A comprehensive review on informal pain-related social support
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Abstract
Adults with chronic pain cite social support (SS) as an important resource. Research has mostly
focused on general SS or pain-specific solicitousness, resulting in a limited understanding of the
role of SS in pain experiences. Drawing on SS theoretical models, this review aimed to
understand how pain-related SS has been conceptualized and measured and how its relationship
with pain experiences has been investigated. Arksey and O´Malley’s scoping review framework
guided the study. A database search (2000-2015) was conducted in PsycINFO, CINAHL,
MEDLINE, EMBASE using a combination of subject headings/keywords on pain and SS; 3864
citations were screened; 101 full texts were assessed for eligibility; references of 52 papers were
hand searched. Fifty-three studies were included. Most studies were either a-theoretical or drew
upon the operant conditioning model. There are several self-report measures and observational
systems to operationalize pain-related SS. However, the Multidimensional Pain Inventory
remains the most often used, accounting for the centrality of the concept of solicitousness in the
literature. Most studies focused on individuals with chronic pain (ICPs) self-report of spousal
pain-related SS and investigated its main effects on pain outcomes. Only a minority investigated
the role of pain SS within the stress and coping process (as a buffer or mediator). Little is known
about mediating pathways, contextual modulation of the effectiveness of SS exchanges and there
are practically no SS-based intervention studies. Drawing on general SS models, the main gaps
in pain-related SS research are discussed and research directions for moving this literature
beyond solicitousness are proposed.
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Chronic Pain, informal social support, solicitousness, scoping review
Citation
Bernardes, S., Forgeron, P., Fournier, K., & Reszel, J. (2017). Beyond solicitousness: A comprehensive review on informal pain-related social support. Pain. 158(11):2066-2076. doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001033
