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Related Concept Videos

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Self-efficacy is the belief in one's capacity to organize and execute actions necessary to manage prospective situations. This belief significantly influences how individuals approach goals, tasks, and challenges across different domains of life.Psychological and Educational ImpactsIndividuals with strong self-efficacy are more resilient in the face of difficulties. They are more likely to adopt effective problem-solving strategies, persist through obstacles, and regulate emotions such as...
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Investigating Pain-Related Avoidance Behavior using a Robotic Arm-Reaching Paradigm
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Investigating Pain-Related Avoidance Behavior using a Robotic Arm-Reaching Paradigm

Published on: October 3, 2020

Measuring pain self-efficacy.

Clare L Miles1, Tamar Pincus, Dawn Carnes

  • 1Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway University of London, London, UK.

The Clinical Journal of Pain
|February 15, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Assessing self-efficacy in chronic pain patients is crucial for prognosis. Current pain self-efficacy measures have limitations, necessitating further research on responsiveness and interpretability for better clinical application.

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Area of Science:

  • Pain Management
  • Psychometrics
  • Health Psychology

Background:

  • Low self-efficacy is linked to poorer prognosis in chronic pain populations.
  • Standardized self-efficacy measures are needed for robust evidence synthesis and treatment comparisons.
  • Accurate measurement of self-efficacy is vital for understanding patient outcomes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Identify self-administered pain self-efficacy measures for chronic pain.
  • Systematically evaluate the clinimetric evidence of commonly used scales.
  • Inform the selection of appropriate measurement tools in research and practice.

Main Methods:

  • Systematic search of two databases for self-efficacy questionnaires.
  • Evaluation of identified questionnaires against established clinimetric criteria.
  • Focus on psychometric properties such as validity, reliability, and interpretability.

Main Results:

  • Thirteen self-efficacy measures were identified; five were clinimetrically assessed.
  • No single questionnaire demonstrated satisfactory performance across all psychometric properties.
  • Internal consistency was generally acceptable, but construct validity varied. Test-retest reliability and responsiveness were under-evaluated.
  • Interpretability of scores was minimal across all assessed scales.

Conclusions:

  • Further research is required to assess the responsiveness and interpretability of existing pain self-efficacy scales.
  • Researchers should carefully select scales appropriate for their specific study aims and populations.
  • Future studies should consider measuring outcome expectancy alongside self-efficacy to enhance prediction of behavior.