2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2014.03.004
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Heterogeneous depression responses to chronic pain onset among middle-aged adults: A prospective study

Abstract: Studies on depression response to chronic pain are limited by lack of clarification of different forms of response patterns and cross-sectional measures. The current study examined heterogeneous long-term patterns of depression response to chronic pain onset using the mixture modeling technique. Depression symptoms prior to and following pain onset over a course of six years were charted in a nationally representative middle-aged sample. Four distinct depression symptom trajectories emerged. The resilience (72… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…In Mancini et al’s study, 71% of the sample did not report any significant changes in their life satisfaction at the year of divorce, and only 19% experienced a moderate decrease in their subjective well-being. Zhu et al (2014), using the Health and Retirement Study survey, report that 72% of people experienced zero or minimal depression symptoms prior to, and following, chronic pain onset. 2 …”
Section: Background Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Mancini et al’s study, 71% of the sample did not report any significant changes in their life satisfaction at the year of divorce, and only 19% experienced a moderate decrease in their subjective well-being. Zhu et al (2014), using the Health and Retirement Study survey, report that 72% of people experienced zero or minimal depression symptoms prior to, and following, chronic pain onset. 2 …”
Section: Background Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Mancini et al's study, 71% of the sample did not report any significant changes in their life satisfaction at the year of divorce, and only 19% experienced a moderate decrease in their subjective wellbeing. Zhu et al (2014), using the Health and Retirement Study survey, report that 72% of people experienced zero or minimal depression symptoms prior to, and following, chronic pain onset.…”
Section: Psychological Resilience and Hedonic Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Chronic pain in people hospitalized with HF was reported as 60% at one hospital. 2 Chronic pain is associated with multiple negative consequences that include increased depression 3 and decreased physical activity, 4 both of which increase burden and further reduce the quality of life for people living with HF. 5 Non-cardiac pain reported by people with HF ranges in intensity, and pain interference with activity from mild 6 to severe, with severe ratings reported by 38.9%.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%