References
- DeGood DE, Tait RC: Assessment of pain beliefs and pain coping. Handbook of Pain Assessment. Edited by DC Turk, R Melzack, The Guildford Press, New York, 2001, pp. 320–345
- Jensen MP, Turner JA, Romano JM, Karoly P: Coping with chronic pain: A critical review of the literature. Pain 47: 249–283, 1991
- Vranceanu AM, Safren S, Cowan J, Ring D: The development of the negative pain thoughts questionnaire. Pain Pract 8: 337–341, 2008
- Keefe FJ, Crisson J, Urban BJ, Williams DA: Analyzing chronic low back pain: The relative contribution of pain coping strategies. Pain 40: 293–301, 1990
- Ring D, Kadzielski J, Malhotra L, Lee SG, Jupiter JB: Psychological factors associated with idiopathic arm pain. J Bone Joint Surg Am 87: 374–380, 2005
- Keefe FJ, Kashikar-Zuck S, Robinson E, Salley A, Beaupre P, Caldwell D, Baucom D, Haythornthwaite J: Pain coping strategies that predict patients’ and spouses’ ratings of patients’ self-efficacy. Pain 73: 191–199, 1997
- Hudak PL, Amadio PC, Bombardier C: Development of an upper extremity outcome measure: The DASH (disabilities of the arm, shoulder and hand) [corrected]. The Upper Extremity Collaborative Group (UECG). Am J Ind Med 29: 602–608, 1996
- Sullivan M, Bishop S: The pain catastrophizing scale: Development and validation. Psychol Assess 7: 524–532, 1995
- Nicholas MK. The pain self efficacy questionnaire: Taking pain into account. Eur J. Pain 11:153–163, 2007
- Faul F, Erdfelder E, Lang A, Buchner A: G*Power 3: A flexible statistical power analysis program for the social, behavioral, and biomedical sciences. Behav Res Meth 39: 175–191, 2007
- Arnstein P: The mediation of disability by self efficacy in different samples of chronic pain patients. Disabil Rehabil 22: 794–801, 2000
- Vranceanu AM, Safren SA, Cowan J, Ring DC: Health concerns and somatic symptoms explain perceived disability and idiopathic hand and arm pain in an orthopedics surgical practice: A path-analysis model. Psychosomatics 51: 330–337, 2010
- Costa LD, Maher CG, McAuley JH, Hancock MJ, Smeets RJ: Self-efficacy is more important than fear of movement in mediating the relationship between pain and disability in chronic low back pain. Eur J Pain 15: 213–219, 2011