
doi: 10.1007/bf01856882
pmid: 8201612
Intensity of angry feelings and styles of expressing anger were examined for their relationship to measures of the chronic pain experience. Subjects were 142 chronic pain patients. Multiple regression analyses revealed that a style of inhibiting the expression of angry feelings was the strongest predictor of reports of pain intensity and pain behavior among a group of variables including demographics, pain history, depression, anger intensity, and other styles of anger expression. In a similar manner anger intensity contributed significantly to predictions of perceived pain interference and activity level. More conservative hierarchical regression analyses supported these findings. Results are consistent with explanatory models of pain and disability that hypothesize an etiologic role of a pervasive inability to express intense negative emotions, particularly anger.
Adult, Male, Verbal Behavior, Chronic Disease, Humans, Pain, Female, Anger, Middle Aged, Severity of Illness Index
Adult, Male, Verbal Behavior, Chronic Disease, Humans, Pain, Female, Anger, Middle Aged, Severity of Illness Index
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