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Old 12-10-2009, 03:27 AM
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fmichael fmichael is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: California
Posts: 1,239
15 yr Member
fmichael fmichael is offline
Senior Member
fmichael's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: California
Posts: 1,239
15 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mslday View Post
I learned a huge lesson from my situation. Malpractice attorneys urge patients to sue doctors - sometimes for legitimate reasons, sometimes for unavoidable bad outcomes. I should have been more careful in selecting my attorney. Just because he believed I had a case did not make him the right one to present it.
Point well made! Thanks.

Mike

ps For a forthcoming article by Lance M. McCracken and Sophie C. Velleman, Psychological flexibility in adults with chronic pain: A study of acceptance, mindfulness, and values-based action in primary care, Pain 2009, check out the atttached.

I'll put it and another article to be published in Pain, Robert Schütze et al, Low mindfulness predicts pain catastrophizing in a fear-avoidance model of chronic pain, which is too large to actually post, in a proper thread later in the day. But here's its abstract in any event:
The relationship between persistent pain and self-directed, non-reactive awareness of present-moment experience (i.e., mindfulness) was explored in one of the dominant psychological theories of chronic pain - the fear-avoidance model[53]. A heterogeneous sample of 104 chronic pain outpatients at a multidisciplinary pain clinic in Australia completed psychometrically sound self-report measures of major variables in this model: Pain intensity, negative affect, pain catastrophizing, pain-related fear, pain hypervigilance, and functional disability. Two measures of mindfulness were also used, the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale [4] and the Five-Factor Mindfulness Questionnaire [1]. Results showed that mindfulness significantly negatively predicts each of these variables, accounting for 17-41% of their variance. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis showed that mindfulness uniquely predicts pain catastrophizing when other variables are controlled, and moderates the relationship between pain intensity and pain catastrophizing. This is the first clear evidence substantiating the strong link between mindfulness and pain catastrophizing, and suggests mindfulness might be added to the fear-avoidance model. Implications for the clinical use of mindfulness in screening and intervention are discussed.

PMID: 19944534 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez
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"Thanks for this!" says:
Mslday (12-10-2009), SandyRI (01-11-2010)