The Ripple Effect of Pain Avoidance: Spreading to Safe Activities
Originally Published 2 years ago — by Neuroscience News

Avoiding activities associated with past pain can lead individuals to avoid related tasks that may be painless, even if they are conceptually similar or in a different category. A study conducted on healthy individuals found that pain avoidance can generalize to safe activities, resulting in needless abstention from valued tasks. The findings emphasize the importance of understanding pain avoidance to improve treatment outcomes for those with chronic pain, as psychological factors play a significant role in predicting chronic pain rather than physical injury severity. Further research is needed to explore how these findings apply to individuals with chronic pain.