Identifying Psychosocial, Self-Management, and Health Profiles Among Women With Chronic Pain Who Have Experienced Intimate Partner Violence and Those Who Have Not: Protocol for a 2-Phase Qualitative and Cross-Sectional Study Using AI Techniques
Ainara Nardi-Rodríguez, Sónia Bernardes, María Ángeles Pastor-Mira, Sofía López-Roig, Lidia Pamies-Aubalat, Andrés Sánchez-Prada, Victoria A Ferrer-Pérez, Ignacio Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Purificación Heras-González

TL;DR
This study explores how chronic pain affects women who have experienced intimate partner violence compared to those who have not, using qualitative and cross-sectional methods with AI techniques.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach to understanding chronic pain in the context of intimate partner violence using combined qualitative and AI-driven quantitative methods.
Findings
Qualitative interviews will reveal lived experiences of chronic pain among women with and without IPV exposure.
Cross-sectional data will identify differences in psychosocial and health profiles between the two groups.
Machine learning will help uncover patterns in risk and protective factors for chronic pain in relation to IPV.
Abstract
Women who experience intimate partner violence (IPV) are more likely to develop disabling chronic pain (CP). However, there is little information on what it means to live with CP while being exposed to IPV. In addition, despite well-established risk and protective factors for CP and its health outcomes, there are no data on whether these factors differ in women who have experienced IPV compared to those who have not. Our aims are to understand the meaning and implications of living with CP for women who have experienced IPV compared to women with CP alone and to identify possible differences in risk and protective factors as well as health outcomes. We have designed 2 studies to be conducted in 2 phases. The first phase will involve a qualitative study with a descriptive and exploratory design. Individual semistructured interviews will be conducted with at least 10 women with CP alone…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Intimate Partner and Family Violence · Suicide and Self-Harm Studies
