Social Spiralling
Cross-source consensus on Social Spiralling from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- The study identified clustered social changes that shifted pain experiences into upward or downward spirals. — Everyday social contexts influence fluctuations into and out of chronic pain: an ethnographic study in England
- A downward spiral could involve pain, isolation, stress, low mood, reduced activity, and difficulty completing basic tasks reinforcing one another. — Everyday social contexts influence fluctuations into and out of chronic pain: an ethnographic study in England
- An upward spiral could occur when work, social connection, financial relief, meaningful activity, and confidence accumulated together. — Everyday social contexts influence fluctuations into and out of chronic pain: an ethnographic study in England
- Enjoyable social activity could distract from pain during the activity, with pain returning afterward. — Everyday social contexts influence fluctuations into and out of chronic pain: an ethnographic study in England