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Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study

BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic pain have elevated risk of suicidal ideation and behavior, including suicide attempts and completed suicides. In most studies, associations between chronic pain and suicidal ideation/suicidal behavior are robust even after adjusting for the effect of sociodemographi...

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Autores principales: Costanza, Alessandra, Chytas, Vasileios, Piguet, Valérie, Luthy, Christophe, Mazzola, Viridiana, Bondolfi, Guido, Cedraschi, Christine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8214181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34003136
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/29365
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author Costanza, Alessandra
Chytas, Vasileios
Piguet, Valérie
Luthy, Christophe
Mazzola, Viridiana
Bondolfi, Guido
Cedraschi, Christine
author_facet Costanza, Alessandra
Chytas, Vasileios
Piguet, Valérie
Luthy, Christophe
Mazzola, Viridiana
Bondolfi, Guido
Cedraschi, Christine
author_sort Costanza, Alessandra
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic pain have elevated risk of suicidal ideation and behavior, including suicide attempts and completed suicides. In most studies, associations between chronic pain and suicidal ideation/suicidal behavior are robust even after adjusting for the effect of sociodemographics and psychiatric comorbidity. However, to refine the risk profile of these patients, further exploration of other possible risk and protective factors is necessary. OBJECTIVE: There is a common clinical observation that experiencing chronic pain often requires a revision of life goals and expectations, and hence, it impacts the existential domain including one’s perception of the meaning in life (MiL). This study aimed to characterize the main domains that constitute the personal MiL, including the “presence of” and “search for” constructs, in a group of patients with chronic pain and suicidal ideation. METHODS: Seventy participants were enlisted by ongoing recruitment through a larger project anchored in daily clinical practice at the Multidisciplinary Pain Center of the Geneva University Hospitals. It was an observational mixed method study. Data were recorded through both validated quantitative questionnaires and qualitative open-ended questions. RESULTS: The total sample consisted of 70 patients. Responses to questionnaires showed a depressive episode in 68 (97%) patients and anxious disorders in 25 (36%) patients. With a score threshold for positive MiL of 24, the mean score for the “presence of” construct was 20.13 (SD 8.23), and 63% (44/70) of respondents had a score <24. The mean score for the “search for” construct was lower at 18.14 (SD 8.64), and 70% (49/70) of respondents had a score <24. The “presence of” and “search for” constructs were significantly positively correlated (R=0.402; P=.001). An open question addressed the “presence of” construct by inviting the respondents to cite domains they consider as providing meaning in their life at the present time. All patients responded to this question, citing one or more domains. The three main dimensions that emerged from content analysis of this qualitative section were as follows: the domain of relationships, the domain of personal activities, and pain and its consequences on MiL. CONCLUSIONS: The study results provide insights into patients with chronic pain and suicidal ideation, including the domains that provide them with meaning in their lives and the impact of pain on these domains with regard to suicidal ideation. The main clinical implications concern both prevention and supportive/psychotherapeutic interventions. They are based on a narrative approach aiming to explore with the patients the content of their suffering and the MiL domains that they could identify to mitigate it, in order to restructure/reinforce these domains and thus possibly reduce suicidal ideation. Specifically, a focus on maintaining the domains of interpersonal relationships and personal activities can allow patients to ultimately escape the biopsychosocial vicious cycle of chronic pain–induced deep moral suffering.
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spelling pubmed-82141812021-07-09 Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study Costanza, Alessandra Chytas, Vasileios Piguet, Valérie Luthy, Christophe Mazzola, Viridiana Bondolfi, Guido Cedraschi, Christine JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic pain have elevated risk of suicidal ideation and behavior, including suicide attempts and completed suicides. In most studies, associations between chronic pain and suicidal ideation/suicidal behavior are robust even after adjusting for the effect of sociodemographics and psychiatric comorbidity. However, to refine the risk profile of these patients, further exploration of other possible risk and protective factors is necessary. OBJECTIVE: There is a common clinical observation that experiencing chronic pain often requires a revision of life goals and expectations, and hence, it impacts the existential domain including one’s perception of the meaning in life (MiL). This study aimed to characterize the main domains that constitute the personal MiL, including the “presence of” and “search for” constructs, in a group of patients with chronic pain and suicidal ideation. METHODS: Seventy participants were enlisted by ongoing recruitment through a larger project anchored in daily clinical practice at the Multidisciplinary Pain Center of the Geneva University Hospitals. It was an observational mixed method study. Data were recorded through both validated quantitative questionnaires and qualitative open-ended questions. RESULTS: The total sample consisted of 70 patients. Responses to questionnaires showed a depressive episode in 68 (97%) patients and anxious disorders in 25 (36%) patients. With a score threshold for positive MiL of 24, the mean score for the “presence of” construct was 20.13 (SD 8.23), and 63% (44/70) of respondents had a score <24. The mean score for the “search for” construct was lower at 18.14 (SD 8.64), and 70% (49/70) of respondents had a score <24. The “presence of” and “search for” constructs were significantly positively correlated (R=0.402; P=.001). An open question addressed the “presence of” construct by inviting the respondents to cite domains they consider as providing meaning in their life at the present time. All patients responded to this question, citing one or more domains. The three main dimensions that emerged from content analysis of this qualitative section were as follows: the domain of relationships, the domain of personal activities, and pain and its consequences on MiL. CONCLUSIONS: The study results provide insights into patients with chronic pain and suicidal ideation, including the domains that provide them with meaning in their lives and the impact of pain on these domains with regard to suicidal ideation. The main clinical implications concern both prevention and supportive/psychotherapeutic interventions. They are based on a narrative approach aiming to explore with the patients the content of their suffering and the MiL domains that they could identify to mitigate it, in order to restructure/reinforce these domains and thus possibly reduce suicidal ideation. Specifically, a focus on maintaining the domains of interpersonal relationships and personal activities can allow patients to ultimately escape the biopsychosocial vicious cycle of chronic pain–induced deep moral suffering. JMIR Publications 2021-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8214181/ /pubmed/34003136 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/29365 Text en ©Alessandra Costanza, Vasileios Chytas, Valérie Piguet, Christophe Luthy, Viridiana Mazzola, Guido Bondolfi, Christine Cedraschi. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 04.06.2021. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Costanza, Alessandra
Chytas, Vasileios
Piguet, Valérie
Luthy, Christophe
Mazzola, Viridiana
Bondolfi, Guido
Cedraschi, Christine
Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study
title Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study
title_full Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study
title_fullStr Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study
title_full_unstemmed Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study
title_short Meaning in Life Among Patients With Chronic Pain and Suicidal Ideation: Mixed Methods Study
title_sort meaning in life among patients with chronic pain and suicidal ideation: mixed methods study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8214181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34003136
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/29365
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