Differentiating pain-related distress from depression in people with persistent musculoskeletal pain: a mixed methods study
Differentiating pain-related distress from depression in people with persistent musculoskeletal pain: a mixed methods study
Depressive symptoms are commonly experienced by people with persistent musculoskeletal (MSK) pain. There is evidence for some individuals that this may be best characterised as pain-related distress; a reaction to living with the impact of pain, rather than a depressive illness. No explorations exist of how to differentiate between the two in primary care. This study aimed to explore key factors that may differentiate between pain-related distress and depression, and the effectiveness of existing symptom screening tools (PHQ-9 and 4DSQ) in identifying distress through a mixed methods approach. First, 21 GPs and 21 people with pain were interviewed about their experiences of pain-related distress. Second, 597 primary care patients with MSK pain completed a cross-sectional questionnaire study reporting on their pain, mental health symptoms, and other life events. Qualitative data suggested key factors distinguishing between pain-related distress and depression included general positive outlook, physical function, and acceptance. Quantitative findings showed that the PHQ-9 may over-categorise participants as depressed; of the 207 participants classified as distressed (but not depressed) on the 4DSQ, 118 (57%) were categorised as moderately or severely depressed on the PHQ-9. Lower positive outlook and sleep interference scores, and higher PHQ-9 and perceived stress scores significantly predicted participants experiencing distress only compared to distress and depression, matching the qualitative findings. These findings indicate that differentiation between pain-related distress and depression may be possible in primary care consultations for persistent musculoskeletal pain. This is essential to ensure that patients are offered appropriate, acceptable, and effective management.
Depression, Distress, Mixed methods, Musculoskeletal, Primary care
Birkinshaw, Hollie
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Pincus, Tamar
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Hughes, Stephanie
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Stuart, Beth
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Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
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Little, Paul
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Moore, Michael
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Shivji, Noureen
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Geraghty, Adam
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13 March 2026
Birkinshaw, Hollie
048af1bc-be16-4df2-be83-fc9cba77b407
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Hughes, Stephanie
a6d39500-67ff-4d7a-a1dc-8e42f80945ff
Stuart, Beth
b9f62686-75f1-49d0-8c79-7d3feca1cb14
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
28f3f383-6b7f-492f-9ffa-8422d7239c9c
Little, Paul
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Shivji, Noureen
c3163359-d2ff-488e-b6a2-fc6fef3e2bc6
Geraghty, Adam
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Birkinshaw, Hollie, Pincus, Tamar, Hughes, Stephanie, Stuart, Beth, Chew-Graham, Carolyn A., Little, Paul, Moore, Michael, Shivji, Noureen and Geraghty, Adam
(2026)
Differentiating pain-related distress from depression in people with persistent musculoskeletal pain: a mixed methods study.
Pain, [1417-1429].
(doi:10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003926).
Abstract
Depressive symptoms are commonly experienced by people with persistent musculoskeletal (MSK) pain. There is evidence for some individuals that this may be best characterised as pain-related distress; a reaction to living with the impact of pain, rather than a depressive illness. No explorations exist of how to differentiate between the two in primary care. This study aimed to explore key factors that may differentiate between pain-related distress and depression, and the effectiveness of existing symptom screening tools (PHQ-9 and 4DSQ) in identifying distress through a mixed methods approach. First, 21 GPs and 21 people with pain were interviewed about their experiences of pain-related distress. Second, 597 primary care patients with MSK pain completed a cross-sectional questionnaire study reporting on their pain, mental health symptoms, and other life events. Qualitative data suggested key factors distinguishing between pain-related distress and depression included general positive outlook, physical function, and acceptance. Quantitative findings showed that the PHQ-9 may over-categorise participants as depressed; of the 207 participants classified as distressed (but not depressed) on the 4DSQ, 118 (57%) were categorised as moderately or severely depressed on the PHQ-9. Lower positive outlook and sleep interference scores, and higher PHQ-9 and perceived stress scores significantly predicted participants experiencing distress only compared to distress and depression, matching the qualitative findings. These findings indicate that differentiation between pain-related distress and depression may be possible in primary care consultations for persistent musculoskeletal pain. This is essential to ensure that patients are offered appropriate, acceptable, and effective management.
Text
FULL Manuscript v1.5 19Dec2025 [clean]
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 March 2026
Published date: 13 March 2026
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2026 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the International Association for the Study of Pain.
Keywords:
Depression, Distress, Mixed methods, Musculoskeletal, Primary care
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 511807
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511807
ISSN: 0304-3959
PURE UUID: d6cbecba-68da-4eff-bda9-c05629922386
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Date deposited: 03 Jun 2026 16:46
Last modified: 04 Jun 2026 02:07
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Contributors
Author:
Hollie Birkinshaw
Author:
Tamar Pincus
Author:
Beth Stuart
Author:
Carolyn A. Chew-Graham
Author:
Noureen Shivji
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