Article

Loss-adjusting: Young People's Constructions of a Future Living with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

Details

Citation

Jones A, Caes L, Eccleston C, Noel M, Rugg T & Jordan A (2020) Loss-adjusting: Young People's Constructions of a Future Living with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. Clinical Journal of Pain, 36 (12), pp. 932-939. https://doi.org/10.1097/ajp.0000000000000880

Abstract
Objectives: Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic pain condition that can present specific difficulties when occurring in adolescence. There is limited work exploring future narratives of healthy adolescents, and how these may differ for those who have chronic health conditions, but there is no research on the future narratives of adolescents who have CRPS. Methods: In this study, 50 adolescents (44 females, 5 males, 1 preferred not to say) aged 14-25 years (mean=19.8, SD=3.68), completed an online story completion task, with a further sample of 10 completing a follow-up telephone interview. Results: Story completion data were initially analysed deductively based on the work of Morley and colleagues using hoped-for and feared-for future codes, revealing higher instances of hope (291 over 48 stories) than fear (99 over 27 stories). These codes were subsequently analysed alongside the in-depth interview data using inductive thematic analysis, generating two themes which represent distinct, yet related, approaches of how adolescents incorporate CRPS into their future narratives: (1)The centrality of loss theme identifies how some adolescents described how CRPS brings loss, with narratives focused on how these adolescents imagine such losses continuing into the future, and (2) the adjusting to loss theme illustrates how other adolescents were able to imagine a future in which they were able to adjust to the losses which CRPS may bring. Discussion: CRPS may damage the future plans of adolescents. However, being or learning how to be flexible about these goals, may help them to build more positive future narratives.

Keywords
chronic pain; adolescence; complex regional pain syndrome; future; qualitative

Journal
Clinical Journal of Pain: Volume 36, Issue 12

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2020
Publication date online11/09/2020
Date accepted by journal31/08/2020
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32075
ISSN0749-8047
eISSN1536-5409

People (1)

People

Dr Line Caes

Dr Line Caes

Associate Professor, Psychology

Research programmes

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Research themes