Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing
Objective Clinicians are beginning to evaluate the effects that Internet use has on patients. The aim of this study is to provide descriptive information on patients’ use of the Internet in regard to their spinal pain. Additionally, this study aims to examine the patient’s type of Internet usage (in...
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2021-03-01
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doaj-b512aaecef634397b1498da846eeabc02021-05-17T08:11:25ZengThieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice0976-31470976-31552021-03-01120230831510.1055/s-0041-1722837Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain CatastrophizingKelly A. Thomas0Cara Sedney1Richard Gross2Department of Counseling, Rehabilitation Counseling, and Counseling Psychology, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, United StatesWest Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, Morgantown, West Virginia, United StatesWVU Center for Integrative Pain Management, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, United StatesObjective Clinicians are beginning to evaluate the effects that Internet use has on patients. The aim of this study is to provide descriptive information on patients’ use of the Internet in regard to their spinal pain. Additionally, this study aims to examine the patient’s type of Internet usage (information vs. support) and its relationship to pain-related distress. Materials and Methods This quantitative-descriptive, survey-based, correlational, cross-sectional design surveyed 143 spinal surgery patients from the Appalachian region. Participants were administered a demographic questionnaire, the pain catastrophizing scale, and an Internet Use and Spine Patients Questionnaire. Descriptive information on patient Internet use was collected through a retrospective recall of the participants’ Internet use and was analyzed utilizing a frequency distribution. A Pearson (r) correlation was conducted to determine the relationship between Internet use and the severity of pain catastrophizing. Results Spinal surgery patients more frequently use the Internet for information than for support. For the individuals who do utilize the Internet for information, most are finding this tool to be somewhat helpful. For spinal patients who do use the Internet for support, there was a positively correlated relationship with magnification, helplessness, and overall pain catastrophizing. Conclusion Patients who present for spinal surgery are generally using the Internet to gain information on their diagnoses. Pain catastrophizing was elevated in relation to Internet use for support. Limitations and future directions are discussed.http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-0041-1722837internetpain catastrophizinginformationsupport |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kelly A. Thomas Cara Sedney Richard Gross |
spellingShingle |
Kelly A. Thomas Cara Sedney Richard Gross Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice internet pain catastrophizing information support |
author_facet |
Kelly A. Thomas Cara Sedney Richard Gross |
author_sort |
Kelly A. Thomas |
title |
Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing |
title_short |
Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing |
title_full |
Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing |
title_fullStr |
Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing |
title_full_unstemmed |
Seeking Information: A Survey of Rural Spinal Patients’ Internet Use and Pain Catastrophizing |
title_sort |
seeking information: a survey of rural spinal patients’ internet use and pain catastrophizing |
publisher |
Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. |
series |
Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice |
issn |
0976-3147 0976-3155 |
publishDate |
2021-03-01 |
description |
Objective Clinicians are beginning to evaluate the effects that Internet use has on patients. The aim of this study is to provide descriptive information on patients’ use of the Internet in regard to their spinal pain. Additionally, this study aims to examine the patient’s type of Internet usage (information vs. support) and its relationship to pain-related distress.
Materials and Methods This quantitative-descriptive, survey-based, correlational, cross-sectional design surveyed 143 spinal surgery patients from the Appalachian region. Participants were administered a demographic questionnaire, the pain catastrophizing scale, and an Internet Use and Spine Patients Questionnaire. Descriptive information on patient Internet use was collected through a retrospective recall of the participants’ Internet use and was analyzed utilizing a frequency distribution. A Pearson (r) correlation was conducted to determine the relationship between Internet use and the severity of pain catastrophizing.
Results Spinal surgery patients more frequently use the Internet for information than for support. For the individuals who do utilize the Internet for information, most are finding this tool to be somewhat helpful. For spinal patients who do use the Internet for support, there was a positively correlated relationship with magnification, helplessness, and overall pain catastrophizing.
Conclusion Patients who present for spinal surgery are generally using the Internet to gain information on their diagnoses. Pain catastrophizing was elevated in relation to Internet use for support. Limitations and future directions are discussed. |
topic |
internet pain catastrophizing information support |
url |
http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-0041-1722837 |
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