Effects of Behavioral Group Therapy on chronic Pain

Abstract
Benign chronic pain is frequently reported among rehabilitation patients. The present study investigates a behavioral treatment model used with 3 consecutive groups of 8 chronic pain outpatients. The behavioral strategy used was to identify specific pain behaviors such as verbal expression of pain, consumption of analgesics and inactivity and to teach the patient to modify these patterns. The treatment was provided by a rehabilitation team and included contingency management of pain behaviors, applied relaxation and social skills training. Results showed significant 6 month follow-up reductions in the expression of pain, analgesics intake and level of rest for the group as a whole subsequent to intervention. In addition, two thirds of the group were engaged in formal pre-occupational training at follow-up.

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