Psychology of Pain Key Terms

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  • Created by: Psych951
  • Created on: 28-12-18 13:44
Pain
Unpleasant subjective experience described in actual or potential tissue damage; Social, emotional, cognitive and sensory; Acute or chronic; Adaptive
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Biomedical framework
Pain is a sensation; Automatic response to external stimulus
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Gate control theory
Stimulus response pathway mediated by psychological factors; Pain as a perception
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Physiological measures
Objective measures of bodily responses such as inflammation and sweating
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Observational measures
Partly objective measures of behaviours characteristic of pain such as grimacing and use of pain relief
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Self-report measures
Subjective measures of attitudes, emotions and behaviours relating to pain experience such as severity and impaired function
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Catastrophising
Lack of confidence and perceived control with an expectation for negative outcomes
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Parental communication
The approach (protect, minimise, monitor) of parents reactions to pain influences child's perception
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Coping
Passive or dependent style of addressing pain
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Affect influencing pain perception
Depression, anxiety and emotional variability increases perception of pain
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Social factors influencing pain perception
Social roles, attention and relief from responsibility impact cost-benefit analysis of pain experience
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Subjective-affective cognitive processes
Psychological factors influencing pain; Classical and operant conditioning; Affect and cognition
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Behavioural processes
Responses to pain changes according to perception; Attention, acknowledgement and secondary gains
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Conceptualisations of pain experience
Comparison; Other's belief in pain; Motivation to understand; Withdraw from public
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Acute pain treatment vs chronic
Acute = Pharmacological treatment; Chronic = Pharmacological combined with other methods
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Respondent treatment methods
Modify physiology by reducing muscular tension e.g. biofeedback
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Cognitive treatment methods
Change thoughts influencing pain management and perception e.g. CBT
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Behavioural treatment methods
Using principles of conditioning e.g. reinforcement
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Placebo
Inert substance causing pain relief
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Non-interactive theories of placebos
Assess individual, treatment or professional in isolation
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Individual and placebo effect
Suggestibility and emotional dependency
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Treatment method and placebo effect
Perceived seriousness and size of pills
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Professional and placebo effect
Perceived concern and status
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Interactive theories of placebos
Interactions between patient, treatment and professional leads to placebo effect; Conditioning, expectations and anxiety reduction
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Physiological theories of placebos
Placebos work similarly to opiates; Releases endorphins
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Patient expectations to explain placebos
Misattribution of changes; Conditioning; Anxiety reduction; Expect to get better so release endorphins
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Cognitive dissonance to explain placebos
Desire for treatment methods to have low dissonance with our justification of behaviour
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Key features of placebo effects
Direction, strength, side effects and time of effects parallels the effect of the 'study drug'
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Card 2

Front

Pain is a sensation; Automatic response to external stimulus

Back

Biomedical framework

Card 3

Front

Stimulus response pathway mediated by psychological factors; Pain as a perception

Back

Preview of the back of card 3

Card 4

Front

Objective measures of bodily responses such as inflammation and sweating

Back

Preview of the back of card 4

Card 5

Front

Partly objective measures of behaviours characteristic of pain such as grimacing and use of pain relief

Back

Preview of the back of card 5
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