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9 Psych. Inj. & L. 1 (2016)

handle is hein.journals/psyinjl9 and id is 1 raw text is: Psychol. Inj. and Law (2016) 9:1-5
DOI 10.1007/s12207-016-9250-x

Introduction to the Special Issue on Justice-Related Appraisals
and Recovery Outcomes
Michael J L Sullivan'
Received: 4 January 2016 /Accepted: 5 January 2016 /Published online: 13 January 2016
© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2016

The past decade has witnessed a resurgence of interest in the
relation between justice-related appraisals and health out-
comes (Sullivan, Scott, & Trost, 2012). An emerging body
of research suggests that the greater the degree of loss or
suffering consequent to injury, the more likely that an injury
will be experienced as a violation of justice principles
(Sullivan, Yakobov, Scott, & Tait, 2014). Findings have also
emerged suggesting that justice-related appraisals are likely to
trigger a cascade of cognitive, emotional, and behavioral
responses that ultimately compromise the recovery process
following injury (Sullivan et al., 2014).
Clinical anecdotes abound of persistent pain sufferers who
feel they have been unjustly victimized either as a direct result
of their injury, or indirectly by the sequellae of their injury
(Aceves-Avila, Ferrari, & Ramos-Remus, 2004; Bigos &
Battie, 1987). Verbalizations such as I wish he could see what
he has done to my life, What did I do to deserve this?,or
Nothing will ever make up for what I have gone through,
reflect at once elements of the perceived unfairness of
suffering, the magnitude of loss consequent to injury, the
inadequacy of compensation, and the desire for retribution.
Empirical research on justice-related appraisals has
proceeded along several different lines. Studies have exam-
ined the buffering effects of just-world beliefs in individuals
with chronic pain (McParland, Hezseltine, Serpell, Eccleston,
& Stenner, 2011; McParland, Hezseltine, Serpell, Eccleston,
& Stenner 2011). Other studies have examined the impact of

Michael J L Sullivan
Michael.Sullivan@mcgill.ca
Department of Psychology, Medicine and Neurology,
Montreal, QC, Canada

claimant dissatisfaction with health or employer practices on
distress and disability in injured workers (Chibnall, Tait,
Andresen, & Hadler, 2006). Research has also examined
the relation between scores on measures of perceived jus-
tice and measures of symptom severity and disability (Sullivan,
Adams, Martel, Scott, & Wideman, 2011). Findings have been
consistent in showing that justice-related appraisals are signifi-
cant determinants of symptom severity, emotional distress, and
disability consequent to debilitating injury (Sullivan et al., 2008;
Sullivan et al., 2012). Despite the apparent centrality of themes
of injustice in the experience of and recovery from injury,
justice-related appraisals have not been addressed directly with-
in current biopsychosocial models of pain and disability
(Gatchel, Peng, Peters, Fuchs, & Turk, 2007).
Until recently, perceived injustice was not thought to be an
important determinant of recovery and rehabilitation outcomes.
As a result, the clinical management of perceived injustice in
the treatment of individuals with persistent musculoskeletal
pain has not been systematically addressed. Indeed, in the sub-
ject index of leading cognitive-behavioral treatment manuals
for pain and disability management, the word injustice does
not appear (Kerns, Sellinger, & Goodin, 2011; Taylor, 2005; D.
Turk, Meichenbaum, & Genest, 1983).
Although justice-related appraisals might be construed as
mental constructions, like all mental representations, they can
be fueled, at least in part, by objective characteristics of an
external reality. It is becoming clear that there are situational
and systemic variables that are likely to seed the development
of perceptions of injustice. Reckless drivers and unsafe work
environments do exist, as do unfair, disrespectful or adversarial
insurer practices. Injured individuals might face legitimate and
continuing inequities in access to services and resources in
medical, insurer, and employment systems. These external
forces can lead to the emergence and persistence of perceptions
of injustice following injury.

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