M
Monika Hasenbring
Researcher at Ruhr University Bochum
Publications - 142
Citations - 4493
Monika Hasenbring is an academic researcher from Ruhr University Bochum. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low back pain & Back pain. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 134 publications receiving 3936 citations. Previous affiliations of Monika Hasenbring include University of Copenhagen & University of Freiburg.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Back pain in the German adult population: prevalence, severity, and sociodemographic correlates in a multiregional survey.
Carsten Oliver Schmidt,Heiner Raspe,Michael Pfingsten,Monika Hasenbring,Heinz Dieter Basler,Wolfgang Eich,Thomas Kohlmann +6 more
TL;DR: A population-based cross-sectional multiregion postal survey was used to provide a descriptive epidemiology of the prevalence and severity of back pain in German adults and to analyze sociodemographic correlates for disabling back pain within and across regions.
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Risk factors of chronicity in lumbar disc patients : a prospective investigation of biologic, psychologic, and social predictors of therapy outcome
TL;DR: The results lead to several hypotheses about biopsychosocial interrelations within the chronification of radicular pain and provide the clinician with a short screening instrument for early diagnosis of chronification.
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The effectiveness of relaxation training in reducing treatment-related symptoms and improving emotional adjustment in acute non-surgical cancer treatment: a meta-analytical review.
TL;DR: Meta‐analytic methods were used to synthesize published, randomized intervention–control studies aiming to improve patients' treatment‐related symptoms and emotional adjustment by relaxation training, finding relaxation seems to be equally effective for patients undergoing different medical procedures.
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Fear-avoidance and endurance-related responses to pain: new models of behavior and their consequences for clinical practice.
TL;DR: A critical evaluation of research, based on the avoidance-endurance model of pain, concludes that patients showing adaptive pain responses will develop more pain prospectively and show higher levels of specific strain postures, measured by accelerometer, than patients showing Adaptive pain responses.
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Exercise-Induced Hypoalgesia in Pain-Free and Chronic Pain Populations: State of the Art and Future Directions
David A Rice,Jo Nijs,Eva Kosek,Timothy H. Wideman,Monika Hasenbring,Kelli F. Koltyn,Thomas Graven-Nielsen,Andrea Polli +7 more
TL;DR: This article provides a contemporary review of the acute effects of exercise on pain and pain sensitivity, including in people with chronic pain conditions, and discusses possible biological mechanisms and potential influence of sex and psychosocial factors.