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How do people with chronic pain choose their music for pain management? Examining the external validity of the cognitive vitality model.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Music interventions for pain are more successful when patients choose the music themselves. But little is known about the attentional strategies used by chronic pain patients when choosing or using music for pain management, and the degree to which these attentional strategies align with the cognitive mechanisms outlines in the cognitive vitality model (CVM, a recently developed theoretical framework that outlines five cognitive mechanisms that mediate the analgesic effects of music for pain management). To investigate this question, we used a sequential explanatory mixed method approach, which included a survey, online music listening experiment, and qualitative data collection, with chronic pain patients (n=70). First, we asked chronic pain patients to name a piece of music that they would use to manage their chronic pain, and answer 19 questions about why they chose that particular piece of music using a questionnaire based on the CVM. Next, we asked chronic pain patients to listen to high energy and low energy pieces of music, to understand aesthetic music preferences and emotional responses at the group level. Finally, participants were asked to qualitatively tell us how they used music to manage their pain. Factor Analysis was completed on the survey data, and identified a five-factor structure in participant responses that was consistent with five mechanisms identified in the CVM. Regression analysis indicated that chronic pain patients choose music for pain management if they think it will facilitate Musical Integration and Cognitive Agency. Musical Integration refers to the degree to which the music can provide an immersive and absorbing experience. Cognitive Agency refers to having an increased feeling of control. At the group level, participants reported a preference for low energy music, and reported that they found high energy music more irritating. However, is it important to note that individual people had different music preferences. Thematic synthesis of patient responses highlighted how these processes mediate the analgesic benefits of music listening from the perspective of chronic pain patients, and highlighted the wide range of music used by participants for chronic pain management including electronic dance music, heavy metal and Beethoven. These findings demonstrate that chronic pain patients use specific attentional strategies when using music for pain management, and these strategies align with the cognitive vitality model.

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Peer reviewed: True


Acknowledgements: The authors would like to acknowledge their appreciation for the time and effort invested by patients in the pain management clinic in St. Vincent’s University Hospital. This includes all of the patients that took part in the study, and all those who took time to consider it. We appreciate that participating in research studies can be demanding. Additionally, we would like to thank all of the staff who helped to make this happen, which includes members of the multi-disciplinary pain management team, secretarial staff, and the ethics review board. Finally, we would like to highlight the instrumental role of Chronic Pain Ireland who helped us to promote this study with the wider chronic pain community outside of the hospital setting. We could not have done this project without you.

Journal Title

Front Psychol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1664-1078
1664-1078

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/