Peer Support Intervention Improves Pain-Related Outcomes Among Rural Adults With Diabetes and Chronic Pain at 12-Month Follow-Up
Link
Description
Reports on a study of an Alabama community-based cognitive behavioral training intervention on pain self-efficacy, pain intensity, and pain-related functional limitations, targeted specifically to rural low-income African American adults with diabetes. Features demographics and statistics on changes in control-intervention differences from baseline to 3-month and 12-month follow-up.
Author(s)
Yulia Khodneva, Joshua Richman, Susan Andreae, Andrea Cherrington, Monika M. Safford
Citation
Journal of Rural Health, 37(2), 394-405
Date
03/2021
Type
Document
Tagged as
Black or African American · Chronic disease management · Community and faith-based initiatives · Diabetes · Statistics and data · Wellness, health promotion, and disease prevention · Alabama