PAIN
Volume 149, Issue 2 , Pages 278-283, May 2010

Adult attachment and pain catastrophizing for self and significant other

  • Lachlan A. McWilliams

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Department of Psychology, Acadia University, Wolfville, NS, Canada B4P 2R6. Tel.: +1 902 585 1495; fax: +1 902 585 1078.
  • ,
  • Diane Holmberg

Department of Psychology, Acadia University, Canada

Received 29 June 2009; received in revised form 1 January 2010; accepted 11 February 2010. published online 08 March 2010.

Abstract 

A growing body of research indicates that attachment insecurity is associated with pain-related catastrophizing. Attachment anxiety has consistently been found to be positively associated with pain catastrophizing. In contrast, the relationship between attachment avoidance and pain catastrophizing has been less consistent. The current study was designed to (a) determine whether anxiety accounts for unique variance in catastrophizing beyond that contributed by the overlapping constructs of self-esteem and neuroticism and (b) clarify the relationship between avoidance and catastrophizing by investigating this relationship when controlling for attachment anxiety. The final objective was to investigate whether attachment is also related to catastrophizing about the pain of significant others. A convenient sample of individuals currently in a romantic relationship (N=148) completed self-report measures of attachment anxiety and avoidance, neuroticism, self-esteem, pain catastrophizing, and significant other pain catastrophizing. Multiple regression analyses indicated that attachment anxiety accounted for unique variance in pain catastrophizing and each of its lower-order components (i.e., rumination, magnification, helplessness), beyond that accounted for by the personality variables. Attachment avoidance was negatively associated with the rumination component of catastrophizing, but this association was only found after controlling for attachment anxiety. The attachment dimensions were also associated with some components of significant other pain catastrophizing. Anxiety was positively associated with the helplessness component of significant other pain catastrophizing, and avoidance was negatively associated with the rumination and helplessness components of significant other pain catastrophizing. Future research directions regarding the social context of pain are discussed.

Keywords: Adult attachment theory, Pain catastrophizing, Significant other catastrophizing, Couples

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PII: S0304-3959(10)00111-9

doi:10.1016/j.pain.2010.02.019

PAIN
Volume 149, Issue 2 , Pages 278-283, May 2010