TY - JOUR A1 - Grünenwald, Isabel A1 - Kaluza, Antonia J. A1 - Schultze, Martin A1 - Dick, Rolf van T1 - Stress mindset and social identification in chronic pain patients and their relationship to coping, well-being & depression T2 - Journal of clinical psychology in medical settings N2 - We predicted that chronic pain patients have a more negative stress mindset and a lower level of social identification than people without chronic pain and that this, in turn, influences well-being through less adaptive coping. 1240 participants (465 chronic pain patients; 775 people in the control group) completed a cross-sectional online-survey. Chronic pain patients had a more negative stress mindset and a lower level of social identification than people without chronic pain. However, a positive stress mindset was linked to better well-being and fewer depressive symptoms, through the use of the adaptive coping behaviors positive reframing and active coping. A higher level of social identification did not impact well-being or depression through the use of instrumental and emotional support coping, but through the more frequent use of positive reframing and active coping. For chronic pain therapy, we propose including modules that foster social identification and a positive stress mindset. KW - Stress mindset KW - Social identity KW - Chronic pain KW - Pain patients KW - Coping Y1 - 2022 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/69629 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-696298 SN - 1573-3572 N1 - The data was not yet uploaded to a public repository. Upon acceptance of the manuscript by the journal, the authors can send the dataset to the reviewers/editors of the journal and/or upload the dataset into a public repository. N1 - Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. VL - 30 IS - 1 SP - 153 EP - 168 PB - Springer Science + Business Media B.V. CY - Dordrecht ER -