Pain catastrophizing as a mediator of the relationship between pain intensity and depression: Evidence from chronic pain patients in Gaza
Abdallah AbuJlambo, Maha AbuZarifa, Rasha Alsaadawi, Yara Ashour, Hanne Lossius, Guido Veronese, Laura Petrini

TL;DR
This study shows that pain catastrophizing connects pain intensity and depression in chronic pain patients in Gaza, suggesting psychological interventions could help.
Contribution
The study identifies pain catastrophizing as a full mediator between pain intensity and depression in a conflict-affected region.
Findings
Pain intensity was positively correlated with depression and catastrophizing.
Catastrophizing fully mediated the relationship between pain intensity and depression.
Psychological interventions like cognitive-behavioral therapy may improve mental health outcomes in such settings.
Abstract
Chronic pain represents a major global public health issue. It is associated with wide-ranging psychosocial consequences. Extensive evidence has demonstrated that pain catastrophizing (PC) contributes to the bidirectional association between chronic pain and psychological distress. The present study aims to explore the psychological and cognitive correlates of chronic pain among individuals living in Gaza. A cross-sectional study was conducted among 272 adults with chronic musculoskeletal pain. Spearman’s correlations assessed associations between pain intensity, catastrophizing and depressive symptoms. Multiple regression and bootstrapped mediation analyses (5,000 resamples and PROCESS macro) evaluated predictors and the mediating role of catastrophizing in the pain–depression relationship. Pain intensity was positively correlated with depression (r = 0.28, p < 0.001) and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Pediatric Pain Management Techniques · Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion
