nari
27-04-2005, 01:38 AM
From the European Journal of pain, 2005 Feb;9(1): 15-24
Any article with J Vlaeyen's name to it attracts my attention, so this article confirms what we suspected all along.
Quote:
Pain catastrophising showed the strongest association with quality of life, and stronger than pain intensity..
large group..1208 PPPs, and a bias towards women being more prone to catastrophic expression than men. (Which I had noticed frequently)
Interesting
Nari
Any article with J Vlaeyen's name to it attracts my attention, so this article confirms what we suspected all along.
Quote:
Pain catastrophising showed the strongest association with quality of life, and stronger than pain intensity..
large group..1208 PPPs, and a bias towards women being more prone to catastrophic expression than men. (Which I had noticed frequently)
Interesting
Nari