This cross-sectional study examined chronic pain, mental health, and pain catastrophizing among 272 Palestinian patients at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza. Participants (median age 43; 57.7% female) completed assessments using the depression, anxiety, and stress (DASS-21) and pain catastrophizing (PCS) scales. Most were married (78.7%), unemployed (50%), and lived on <1,974 ILS/month (94.1%). Lower limb pain (26.8% knee) predominated, with a median pain duration of 4 years. High rates of mental health symptoms were observed: depression (83.1%), anxiety (83.8%), and stress (88.6%), with 56.3% showing extremely severe anxiety. Pain catastrophizing correlated strongly with psychological distress. Findings highlight the need for integrated, trauma-informed pain management addressing both biomedical and psychosocial factors in conflict-affected populations. Future research should explore how sociopolitical stressors and catastrophic thinking interact to exacerbate pain experiences in humanitarian crises.
Abujlambo, A., Abuzarifa, M., Ashour, Y., Lossius, H., Veronese, G. (2026). Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of Palestinian patients with chronic pain: a cross-sectional study from Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS [10.1038/s41598-026-53197-w].
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of Palestinian patients with chronic pain: a cross-sectional study from Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza
Veronese, Guido
2026
Abstract
This cross-sectional study examined chronic pain, mental health, and pain catastrophizing among 272 Palestinian patients at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza. Participants (median age 43; 57.7% female) completed assessments using the depression, anxiety, and stress (DASS-21) and pain catastrophizing (PCS) scales. Most were married (78.7%), unemployed (50%), and lived on <1,974 ILS/month (94.1%). Lower limb pain (26.8% knee) predominated, with a median pain duration of 4 years. High rates of mental health symptoms were observed: depression (83.1%), anxiety (83.8%), and stress (88.6%), with 56.3% showing extremely severe anxiety. Pain catastrophizing correlated strongly with psychological distress. Findings highlight the need for integrated, trauma-informed pain management addressing both biomedical and psychosocial factors in conflict-affected populations. Future research should explore how sociopolitical stressors and catastrophic thinking interact to exacerbate pain experiences in humanitarian crises.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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