The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship of age and pain s
everity (i.e, mild versus severe pain) in predicting coping strategies of i
ndividuals with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). An age-stratified sample (N = 12
1) of individuals diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis completed a modified
version of the Coping Strategies Questionnaire (CSQ). Individuals were aske
d to report the coping strategies used for mild versus severe pain. Finding
s included: (1) older adults were more likely than younger adults to report
use of maladaptive coping strategies in the context of mild, but not sever
e, RA pain, (2) older adults' reported patterns of coping reflected less-th
an-anticipated expertise in dealing with RA pain, and (3) individuals, rega
rdless of age, reported use of more active coping strategies in the context
of mild pain and use of more maladaptive coping strategies in the context
of severe pain. The present study suggests that research regarding illness
and coping is most informative when it captures the individual-situational
interaction of dealing with stressors such as chronic pain. (C) 1999 Intern
ational Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier Science B.
V.