Pain and quality of life in persons with spinal cord injury: Mediating effects of mindfulness, self‐efficacy, social support, and functional independence

Author:

Bhattarai Muna1ORCID,McDaniels Bradley2,Jin Yuanyuan3,Smedema Susan M.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing Texas A&M University Bryan Texas USA

2. College of Health and Public Service University of North Texas Denton Texas USA

3. School of Nursing Soochow University Suzhou China

4. Department of Rehabilitation Psychology and Special Education University of Wisconsin Madison Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo identify mediating roles of mindfulness, self‐efficacy, social support, and functional independence in the relationship between pain and quality of life (QOL) in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI).MethodsA cross‐sectional descriptive study was conducted using a sample of 272 persons with SCI living in the United States. The participants completed self‐report standardized questionnaires on a Qualtrics survey. A parallel mediation analysis adjusting for covariates was performed to test the hypotheses.ResultsFindings showed significant direct effects of pain on functional independence, self‐efficacy, mindfulness, and social support. Self‐efficacy, mindfulness, and social support had significant direct effects on QOL. In the mediation analysis, mindfulness, self‐efficacy, and social support significantly mediated the relationship between pain and QOL, controlling for other variables in the model.ConclusionsThis study adds to the extant literature by providing evidence that mindfulness, self‐efficacy, and social support not only directly contribute to QOL but are likely to mitigate the negative effect of pain on QOL in persons with SCI. Identifying these potential factors that can assuage the adverse effects of pain on QOL is a first step toward active intervention to facilitate the adjustment of persons with SCI.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology

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