The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain

Objective: The purpose of the following study was to test the feasibility of using an ecological momentary assessment strategy during participation in water exercise. This assessment strategy was used to collect ratings of pain intensity level, affective status and self-efficacy for engaging in regu...

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Main Author: Johnson, Elizabeth
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37793
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-204448/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-377932020-09-26T05:31:46Z The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain Johnson, Elizabeth Psychology Winett, Richard A. Davy, Brenda M. Savla, Jyoti S. Clum, George A. Jr. Anderson, Eileen S. chronic pain exercise ecological momenary assessment Objective: The purpose of the following study was to test the feasibility of using an ecological momentary assessment strategy during participation in water exercise. This assessment strategy was used to collect ratings of pain intensity level, affective status and self-efficacy for engaging in regular exercise prior to, during and following participation in water exercise for women with chronic pain. Design: Participants (N=15) completed six measures assessing physical activity level and reactions to physical activity and exercise participation and participated in elicitation interviews focused on their experiences with chronic pain and physical activity and exercise. Participants reported daily pain intensity levels, affect and self-efficacy each morning by phone and used cellular phones to report momentary ratings immediately following participation in water exercise for 6 weeks. Results: Participant profiles were developed to display patterns of pain intensity, affect and self-efficacy over the course of 6 weeks. Profiles indicated a variety of levels of exercise consistency in participants. Pain intensity, affect and self-efficacy varied over the course of an exercise event and revealed varied patterns across participants. Overall, momentary self-efficacy (M¹= 7.98, SD=1.65; M²= 8.29, SD=1.62; M³=8.45, SD=1.45) and affect mean ratings (M¹= 2.05, SD=1.42; M²= 2.76, SD=1.22; M³=3.02, SD=1.06) increased over the course of the exercise events while pain levels decreased from pre-exercise levels (M¹= 2.67, SD=2.30; M²= 1.85, SD=1.86; M³=1.95, SD=2.05). Elicitation interviews indicated themes related to the importance of enjoyment of exercise, social factors, and impact on pain level and overall physical condition. Final interviews provided information about the reactions of participants to the assessment strategy and offered insight into the acceptance of this approach for future studies of exercise behaviors. Conclusion: Overall, this approach to ecological momentary assessment of variables associated with exercise was acceptable to participants and revealed variable patterns of pain intensity, self-efficacy and affective state in relation to water-exercise engagement. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:11:00Z 2014-03-14T21:11:00Z 2010-04-30 2010-05-12 2010-06-14 2010-06-14 Dissertation etd-05122010-204448 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37793 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-204448/ Johnson_EJ_D_2010.pdf IRB_Approval_Letter_Cont.pdf Johnson_EJ_D_2010.pdf IRB_Approval_Letter.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic chronic pain
exercise
ecological momenary assessment
spellingShingle chronic pain
exercise
ecological momenary assessment
Johnson, Elizabeth
The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain
description Objective: The purpose of the following study was to test the feasibility of using an ecological momentary assessment strategy during participation in water exercise. This assessment strategy was used to collect ratings of pain intensity level, affective status and self-efficacy for engaging in regular exercise prior to, during and following participation in water exercise for women with chronic pain. Design: Participants (N=15) completed six measures assessing physical activity level and reactions to physical activity and exercise participation and participated in elicitation interviews focused on their experiences with chronic pain and physical activity and exercise. Participants reported daily pain intensity levels, affect and self-efficacy each morning by phone and used cellular phones to report momentary ratings immediately following participation in water exercise for 6 weeks. Results: Participant profiles were developed to display patterns of pain intensity, affect and self-efficacy over the course of 6 weeks. Profiles indicated a variety of levels of exercise consistency in participants. Pain intensity, affect and self-efficacy varied over the course of an exercise event and revealed varied patterns across participants. Overall, momentary self-efficacy (M¹= 7.98, SD=1.65; M²= 8.29, SD=1.62; M³=8.45, SD=1.45) and affect mean ratings (M¹= 2.05, SD=1.42; M²= 2.76, SD=1.22; M³=3.02, SD=1.06) increased over the course of the exercise events while pain levels decreased from pre-exercise levels (M¹= 2.67, SD=2.30; M²= 1.85, SD=1.86; M³=1.95, SD=2.05). Elicitation interviews indicated themes related to the importance of enjoyment of exercise, social factors, and impact on pain level and overall physical condition. Final interviews provided information about the reactions of participants to the assessment strategy and offered insight into the acceptance of this approach for future studies of exercise behaviors. Conclusion: Overall, this approach to ecological momentary assessment of variables associated with exercise was acceptable to participants and revealed variable patterns of pain intensity, self-efficacy and affective state in relation to water-exercise engagement. === Ph. D.
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Johnson, Elizabeth
author Johnson, Elizabeth
author_sort Johnson, Elizabeth
title The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain
title_short The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain
title_full The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain
title_fullStr The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain
title_full_unstemmed The Feasibility of Ecological Momentary Assessment of Pain Intensity, Affect and Self-Efficacy Associated with Exercise in Women with Chronic Pain
title_sort feasibility of ecological momentary assessment of pain intensity, affect and self-efficacy associated with exercise in women with chronic pain
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37793
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-204448/
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