Personal Danger Signals Reprocessing: New Online Group Intervention for Chronic Pain
Carmit Himmelblau Gat, Natalia Polyviannaya, Pavel Goldstein

TL;DR
This study introduces PDSR, an online group intervention targeting danger signal processing to effectively reduce chronic pain and improve mental health, demonstrating significant benefits in a cohort of women.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel online group intervention, PDSR, specifically designed to modify danger signal mechanisms in chronic pain patients, showing promising efficacy.
Findings
Significant pain reduction with large effect sizes.
Improved mental health and reduced pain interference.
Secondary benefits include decreased catastrophizing and anxiety.
Abstract
Chronic pain is a significant global health issue, with many patients experiencing persistent pain despite no identifiable organic cause, classified as nociplastic pain. Increasing evidence highlights the role of danger signal processing in the maintenance of chronic pain. In response, we developed Personal Danger Signals Reprocessing (PDSR), an online, group-based intervention designed to modify these mechanisms using coaching techniques to enhance accessibility and affordability. This study evaluated the efficacy of PDSR in reducing pain and mental health comorbidities. A cohort of women (N=19, mean age 43) participated in an 8-week online program, receiving weekly sessions on chronic pain mechanisms within a systemic framework. Outcomes were assessed at three time points: pre-intervention, mid-intervention, and post-intervention. A waiting list group (N=20, mean age 43.5) completed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research
