Positive Affect as a Source of Resilience for Adults with Chronic Pain

/Positive Affect as a Source of Resilience for Adults with Chronic Pain
Positive Affect as a Source of Resilience for Adults with Chronic Pain2022-06-09T16:29:58-04:00

Title: Positive Affect as a Source of Resilience for Adults with Chronic Pain

InvestigatorAnthony Ong, PhD, Cornell University

Overview: This pilot will evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of an online-delivered positive affect (PA) skills intervention, LARKSPUR (Lessons in Affect Regulation to Keep Stress and Pain UndeR control), in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). The pilot focuses on Stage 1 (providing the basis for modification and refinement of existing interventions) of the NIA’s Stage Model of Behavioral Intervention Development in that it 1) identifies PA enhancement as a promising therapeutic element relevant for the treatment of FMS, and 2) evaluate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of LARKSPUR as a means of reducing pain and pain-related interference in FMS patients.

Note: Pilot started in 2021

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Translational Research Institute on Pain in Later Life
Weill Cornell Medicine, Division of Geriatric and Palliative Medicine
525 East 68th Street
New York, NY 10065
Phone: 212.746.1801
Email: krh4005@med.cornell.edu