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PAInful Decisions - How Chronic Pain Affects Daily Decision-making: PAID
Details
Locations:Australia, Poland
Start Date:Aug 1, 2023
End Date:Jul 31, 2025
Contract value: EUR 158,485
Sectors: Health, Research, Science & Innovation
Description
Programme(s): HORIZON.1.2 - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA)
Topic(s): HORIZON-MSCA-2021-PF-01-01 - MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships 2021
Call for proposal: HORIZON-MSCA-2021-PF-01
Funding Scheme: HORIZON-AG-UN - HORIZON Unit Grant
Grant agreement ID: 101059716
Project description:
Body–brain interaction in chronic pain Fibromyalgia (FM) is a medical condition characterised by chronic widespread pain, fatigue and cognitive symptoms. Chronic pain treatment typically includes effortful exercise and other long-term interventions. However, adherence to these treatments is often low, indicating that people with chronic pain may have altered decision-making mechanisms related to delayed and effortful rewards. Understanding if long-term pain influences decision-making and what aspects of long-term pain contribute most to decision-making are essential for evidence-based management strategies. The EU-funded PAID project will assess delay and effort attitudes in FM patients and in a pain-free control group. The project will integrate experimental psychology, behavioural economics, clinical practice, psychophysiology and neuroimaging approaches to investigate the role of body–brain interactions in chronic pain.
Objective:
Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain syndrome characterized by widespread pain, multiple tender points, fatigue, and impaired mental functioning. Best practice interventions for chronic pain typically include effortful exercise and long-term treatment – i.e. short-term costs (effort) with delayed benefit (improved pain and function). Problematically, adherence to these treatments is often low, suggesting that people with chronic pain may have altered decision-making related to delayed and effortful rewards. Understanding if long-term pain influences decision-making, what aspects of long-term pain contribute most to decision-making (e.g. emotional versus physical), and the neural underpinnings, are essential given clear relevance of altered decision-making to the adherence to evidence-based management strategies. The PAInful Decisions (PAID) project will address these critical aspects by evaluating delay and effort attitudes in those experiencing FM and in a group of matched pain-free controls. Additionally, I will investigate the unique role of emotions and bodily sensation perception as potential contributing factors to altered decision-making involving delayed and effortful gratification. PAID is a highly innovative and interdisciplinary project, integrating approaches from experimental psychology, behavioural economics, clinical practice, psychophysiology, and neuroimaging. This way, I will be able to comprehensively investigate the role of body-brain interactions in the context of chronic pain. Such a systematic, selective, and interdisciplinary approach to study decision-making in chronic pain is a considerable research challenge, yet the results have an essential meaning for patients’ life and clinical practice, offering to move basic and applied science forward.