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Planning and developing an intervention to improve the psychological wellbeing of people living with persistent pain: De-Stress Pain

Planning and developing an intervention to improve the psychological wellbeing of people living with persistent pain: De-Stress Pain
Planning and developing an intervention to improve the psychological wellbeing of people living with persistent pain: De-Stress Pain
Background: people with persistent musculoskeletal (MSK) pain often report depressive symptoms. Distress and depression have been found to predict the development of chronic pain conditions. Evidence suggests pain-related distress is qualitatively different from depressive illness, and current referral pathways and available interventions are sub-optimal for people with persistent MSK pain and distress. We aimed to develop and test the acceptability and proof of concept of an intervention to reduce pain-related distress in people with chronic MSK pain.

Methods: the Person-Based Approach (PBA)(1) informed the processes undertaken to inform intervention development. This included semi-structured interviews with people with persistent pain and with General Practitioners (GPs); and a stakeholder discussion with social prescribers. Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) representatives had input throughout all development work. Findings from these activities were triangulated to inform the development of a prototype intervention which was tested in a repeated-measures, mixed methods proof-of-concept study called De-Stress Pain.

The De-Stress Pain intervention offered 4-6 social prescriber sessions over 12 weeks, and access to a study website. 16 participants were recruited from general practices, and 4 social prescribers were recruited from Primary Care Networks (PCNs) and charitable organisations. Both quantitative measures and qualitative interviews were completed by participants at baseline and 12 weeks post-baseline. Quantitative measures included questions about mood (DAPOS, WEMWBS, 4DSQ), pain chronicity, pain intensity and musculoskeletal health (MSK-HQ). Semi-structured interviews with participants explored the participants’ context, their experiences of pain related distress, and their experiences of the intervention. Social prescribers were interviewed to explore their experiences of delivering the intervention. Interviews were analysed using thematic analysis.

Results: the De-Stress Pain intervention was acceptable both to patients and to social prescribers. Some participants experienced positive changes such as improved mood, increased hope and increased activity. The social prescribers (“De-Stress Coaches”) provided accountability and supported motivation. All measures of mood showed improvement. Limited time and money were identified as barriers to engagement, along with participants holding the view that increasing pleasurable activities was indulgent. Some participants were already socially engaged and busy at the point of entering the study.

Conclusions: we have confirmed the intervention is needed, acceptable and welcomed by people with pain. Social prescribers found the intervention acceptable to deliver. We identified the barriers that need to be addressed in future versions of the intervention.

Competing Interest Statement: the authors have declared no competing interest.

Funding Statement: this study was funded by Versus Arthritis.

Author declarations: I confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained.
medRxiv
Hughes, Stephanie
a6d39500-67ff-4d7a-a1dc-8e42f80945ff
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Geraghty, Adam W.A.
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
28f3f383-6b7f-492f-9ffa-8422d7239c9c
Stuart, Beth
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209
Little, Paul
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Birkinshaw, Hollie
048af1bc-be16-4df2-be83-fc9cba77b407
Hughes, Stephanie
a6d39500-67ff-4d7a-a1dc-8e42f80945ff
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Geraghty, Adam W.A.
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
28f3f383-6b7f-492f-9ffa-8422d7239c9c
Stuart, Beth
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209
Little, Paul
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Birkinshaw, Hollie
048af1bc-be16-4df2-be83-fc9cba77b407

[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]

Record type: UNSPECIFIED

Abstract

Background: people with persistent musculoskeletal (MSK) pain often report depressive symptoms. Distress and depression have been found to predict the development of chronic pain conditions. Evidence suggests pain-related distress is qualitatively different from depressive illness, and current referral pathways and available interventions are sub-optimal for people with persistent MSK pain and distress. We aimed to develop and test the acceptability and proof of concept of an intervention to reduce pain-related distress in people with chronic MSK pain.

Methods: the Person-Based Approach (PBA)(1) informed the processes undertaken to inform intervention development. This included semi-structured interviews with people with persistent pain and with General Practitioners (GPs); and a stakeholder discussion with social prescribers. Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) representatives had input throughout all development work. Findings from these activities were triangulated to inform the development of a prototype intervention which was tested in a repeated-measures, mixed methods proof-of-concept study called De-Stress Pain.

The De-Stress Pain intervention offered 4-6 social prescriber sessions over 12 weeks, and access to a study website. 16 participants were recruited from general practices, and 4 social prescribers were recruited from Primary Care Networks (PCNs) and charitable organisations. Both quantitative measures and qualitative interviews were completed by participants at baseline and 12 weeks post-baseline. Quantitative measures included questions about mood (DAPOS, WEMWBS, 4DSQ), pain chronicity, pain intensity and musculoskeletal health (MSK-HQ). Semi-structured interviews with participants explored the participants’ context, their experiences of pain related distress, and their experiences of the intervention. Social prescribers were interviewed to explore their experiences of delivering the intervention. Interviews were analysed using thematic analysis.

Results: the De-Stress Pain intervention was acceptable both to patients and to social prescribers. Some participants experienced positive changes such as improved mood, increased hope and increased activity. The social prescribers (“De-Stress Coaches”) provided accountability and supported motivation. All measures of mood showed improvement. Limited time and money were identified as barriers to engagement, along with participants holding the view that increasing pleasurable activities was indulgent. Some participants were already socially engaged and busy at the point of entering the study.

Conclusions: we have confirmed the intervention is needed, acceptable and welcomed by people with pain. Social prescribers found the intervention acceptable to deliver. We identified the barriers that need to be addressed in future versions of the intervention.

Competing Interest Statement: the authors have declared no competing interest.

Funding Statement: this study was funded by Versus Arthritis.

Author declarations: I confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 30 September 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507379
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507379
PURE UUID: 634f81f6-2c18-47c6-9dfc-f1a6811c714e
ORCID for Stephanie Hughes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4801-8245
ORCID for Tamar Pincus: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3172-5624
ORCID for Adam W.A. Geraghty: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7984-8351
ORCID for Beth Stuart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5432-7437
ORCID for Paul Little: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3664-1873
ORCID for Michael Moore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5127-4509
ORCID for Hollie Birkinshaw: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0853-2995

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Dec 2025 17:37
Last modified: 09 Dec 2025 03:04

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Contributors

Author: Tamar Pincus ORCID iD
Author: Carolyn A. Chew-Graham
Author: Beth Stuart ORCID iD
Author: Paul Little ORCID iD
Author: Michael Moore ORCID iD
Author: Hollie Birkinshaw ORCID iD

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