# Biobehavior Life Regulation (BLR) scale for living well in chronic pain: Preliminary scale development and validation

**Authors:** Aram S. Mardian, Martha Kent, Jenna L. Gress-Smith, Lucia Ciciolla, Morgan L. Regalado-Hustead, Brandon A. Scott, Megan E. Petrov

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0299126 · PLOS ONE · 2024-04-29

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new scale to assess how people regulate their lives in the presence of chronic pain, focusing on engagement, social connections, and personal growth.

## Contribution

The BLR scale is a novel tool that measures adaptive regulation strategies in unpredictable chronic pain, filling a gap in existing pain assessment tools.

## Key findings

- The BLR scale was validated with a two-factor structure covering Pain Regulation and Pain Unpredictability.
- The scale showed adequate fit and moderate to high correlations with established constructs in both VA and community samples.
- Factor 1 included 8 items on engagement, social relatedness, and self-growth, while Factor 2 included 6 items on pain unpredictability.

## Abstract

Currently available pain assessment scales focus on pain-related symptoms and limitations imposed by pain. Validated assessment tools that measure how pain is regulated by those who live well with pain are missing. This study seeks to fill this gap by describing the development and preliminary validation of the Biobehavior Life Regulation (BLR) scale. The BLR scale assesses engagement, social relatedness, and self-growth in the presence of chronic pain and the unpredictability of chronic pain. Sources for items included survivor strategies, patient experiences, existing scales, and unpredictable pain research. Review for suitability yielded 52 items. Validation measures were identified for engagement, social relatedness, self-growth, and unpredictability of pain. The study sample (n = 202) represented patients treated in the Phoenix VA Health Care System (n = 112) and two community clinics (n = 90). Demographic characteristics included average age of 52.5, heterogeneous in ethnicity and race at the VA, mainly Non-Hispanic White at the community clinics, 14 years of education, and pain duration of 18 years for the VA and 15.4 years for community clinics. Exploratory factor analysis using Oblimin rotation in the VA sample (n = 112) yielded a two-factor solution that accounted for 48.23% of the total variance. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) in the same sample showed high correlations among items in Factor 1, indicating redundancy and the need to further reduce items. The final CFA indicated a 2-factor solution with adequate fit to the data. The 2-factor CFA was replicated in Sample 2 from the community clinics (n = 90) with similarly adequate fit to the data. Factor 1, Pain Regulation, covered 8 items of engagement, social relatedness, and self-growth while Factor 2, Pain Unpredictability, covered 6 items related to the experience of unpredictable pain. Construct validity showed moderate to higher Pearson correlations between BLR subscales and relevant well-established constructs that were consistent across VA and community samples. The BLR scale assesses adaptive regulation strategies in unpredictable pain as a potential tool for evaluating regulation resources and pain unpredictability.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** chronic pain (MESH:D059350), Pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

102 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11057751/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11057751