logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Effects of stress on pain in females using a mobile health app in the Russia-Ukraine conflict

Medicine and Health

Effects of stress on pain in females using a mobile health app in the Russia-Ukraine conflict

A. Kazlou, K. Bornukova, et al.

Discover groundbreaking insights from researchers Aliaksandr Kazlou, Kateryna Bornukova, Aidan Wickham, Vladimir Slaykovskiy, Kimberly Peven, Anna Klepchukova, Sonia Ponzo, and Sarah Garfinkel as they unveil the intriguing relationship between stress and pain in Ukrainian women amidst the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict. Their analysis of data from the Flo health app reveals a surprising trend where higher stress correlates with lower pain reports, shedding light on the phenomenon of stress-induced analgesia.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The chronic and acute effects of stress can have divergent effects on health; long-term effects are associated with detrimental physical and mental health sequelae, while acute effects may be advantageous in the short-term. Stress-induced analgesia, the attenuation of pain perception due to stress, is a well-known phenomenon that has yet to be systematically investigated under ecological conditions. Using Flo, a women's health and wellbeing app and menstrual cycle tracker, with a world-wide monthly active usership of more than 57 million, women in Ukraine were monitored for their reporting of stress, pain and affective symptoms before, and immediately after, the onset of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict. To avoid potential selection (attrition) or collider bias, we rely on a sample of 87,315 users who were actively logging multiple symptoms before and after the start of the war. We found an inverse relationship between stress and pain, whereby higher reports of stress predicted lower rates of pain. Stress did not influence any other physiological symptoms with a similar magnitude, nor did any other symptom have a similar effect on pain. This relationship generally decreased in magnitude in countries neighbouring and surrounding Ukraine, with Ukraine serving as the epicentre. These findings help characterise the relationship between stress and health in a real-world setting.
Publisher
npj Mental Health Research
Published On
Jan 10, 2024
Authors
Aliaksandr Kazlou, Kateryna Bornukova, Aidan Wickham, Vladimir Slaykovskiy, Kimberly Peven, Anna Klepchukova, Sonia Ponzo, Sarah Garfinkel
Tags
stress
pain
Ukraine
Russia-Ukraine conflict
self-reported data
stress-induced analgesia
health app
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny