Abstract
Pain is not experienced in isolation; it is affected by and affects other people. Interactions between parents and partners and people living with pain affect beliefs, emotions and behaviours, and pain progress and change. We searched systematically for longitudinal studies of associations between specific familial, dyadic, interpersonal factors and quantitative pain transitions. We coded studies for risk of bias. For the narrative synthesis, we grouped findings by dyads - parents and children, and people with pain and their partners (usually spouses), and then by the psychosocial mechanism/s. We described certainty of evidence for each pain transition and each mechanism. Patient and public contributors were involved throughout. Of 52 studies, 38 were of parents and children (27,814 dyads) and 14 of partners (4904 dyads). Three groups of predictive factors were identified for parent and child studies: parent mental health, parent cognitions, and parent behaviours. Parental anxiety (but not depression) predicted children's onset of pain and worsening; the evidence was of moderate certainty and almost exclusively involved mothers. Evidence that some parental behaviours, such as protective behaviours, were associated with worse child pain was of very low certainty. The evidence for partners was of poor quality, precluding synthesis. The review highlights that most interpersonal pain research fails to capture the complex dynamics of longstanding relationships and highlights the difficulty of doing so using simple models.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Pain |
Early online date | 21 Feb 2025 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 21 Feb 2025 |
Acknowledgements
The authors gratefully acknowledge and thank the public contributors that form the Workpackage Development Group for sharing their time, insight, and experiences throughout the study duration. The authors also thank Dr Emma Fisher for her proofreading and comments on the draft version of this paper. In 2022, ACdeCW contributed to a one-day workshop initiated by Reckitt Benckiser but organised and run by Oxford University Innovations Ltd; payment was to their discretionary research account via UCL Consultants. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Medical Research Council orVersus Arthritis. Author contributions: H. Birkinshaw was the senior researcher leading on all aspects of this study, including design, data extraction, coding, and write up. A. de C Williams, E. Keogh, and C. Eccleston contributed to the design, interpretation, and write up of the study. C. Friedrich was part of the team designing the study, led on the literature search, and contributed to extraction, coding, and write up. C. Lee contributed to the coding and the write up. T. Pincus was the principal researcher on this study, responsible for all aspects of the study including the original vision, supervision of the researchers, developing and implementing the methodology, the interpretation, and write up.
Funding
This work was supported by a joint and equal investment from UKRI (grant number MR/W004151/1) and the charity Versus Arthritis (grant number 22891) through the Advanced Pain Discovery Platform (APDP) initiative. For UKRI, the initiative is led by the Medical Research Council (MRC), with support from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
Funders | Funder number |
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UK Research & Innovation | MR/W004151/1 |
Keywords
- Chronic pain
- Dyadic
- Interpersonal
- Pain
- Parents
- Partners
- Psychosocial
- Transitions
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Neurology
- Clinical Neurology
- Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine