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The Lankenau Pain Center About Chronic Pain Management
The primary goals in chronic pain management are to assess, understand and treat your pain condition. This sounds simple. It is not simple or easy. The process requires a great deal of time and effort on both the part of the pain management team and you. This guide will help you understand:
Chronic pain is sometimes defined officially as pain lasting more than 6 months. It may also be accurate to define chronic pain as pain that has no clear end in sight. It may be something that you will have to learn to live with - or around. Anyone who has lived with chronic pain - or has treated patients with chronic pain - eventually comes to the understanding that the chronic pain is a disease in itself, regardless of what is causing the pain. It is this disease - chronic pain - that pain management specialists treat. This does not mean that the team will ignore what is causing your pain. The first goal is to assess your pain. This means that your healthcare provider must try determine what is causing your pain if possible. The first question that should be asked is: "Does the pain have a source that can be eliminated by doing something to you - such as a medical treatment or surgery?" Usually, the doctors that you have seen before you arrive at a pain management center have already done this. They refer you to the pain management center because they have not found anything that will reliably eliminate your pain. The pain management team will start from scratch and review all the tests and imaging studies that have been done and examine you. Sometimes the pain specialist may uncover new things or make new diagnoses. Usually they do not. Once your pain managment specialists have satisfied themselves that there is no reliable way to eliminate your pain through a medical treatment or surgery, they will begin the process of understanding your pain. This is a complex process. It does not end as long as you have the pain. The pain management team at the Lankenau Hospital Pain Center will constantly reevaluate what we think about your pain, how it is affecting you and what is needed to change the approach to helping you live with your pain. Understanding your pain and treating your pain go hand in hand. How you respond to certain treatments gives your pain specialist a better understanding of your pain. They probably will not get the right, or best, combination on the first try - or the second. But they will continue to work with you to refine the treatment plan so that you get the best plan that can be can offered. Understanding your pain is a never ending process - neither for you nor for your healthcare providers. Have patience both with yourself and with your pain management team. In the majority of chronic pain patients, the sensation of pain will NOT be eliminated. BUT, with treatment you can drastically change how much the pain affects your life. Chronic pain is a disease that can be managed effectively. You should expect your pain management team to work with you and your primary care provider to effectively manage your chronic pain condition with all of the expertise and tools available as long as you need help. Once the process of creating a treatment plan with you begins, there are many different possible options that can be explored. An important thing for you to realize is that these options are divided into two groups:
Each of these approaches are important and have value in treating your pain. The goal is to find a balance where you are in control of as much of your treatment plan as possible - while you minimize the treatment options that require something to be delivered that is controlled by someone else. This situation just makes more sense in the long run - because it puts you more in control of managing your pain. It's cheaper, requires less time spent in provider's offices and ultimately it is more effective. Most chronic pain patients do require some of the "things people do to you" - such as medications, massage and injections to deaden the pain at times. Early on this seems to be more important as you learn the skills that will allow you to move beyond dependence on some of these "passive" modalities. Remember, the main goal is to help you manage your pain in a way that is effective for you. If that requires some passive modalities, then so be it. Things People Do To You In our current healthcare culture, we are used to going to see a practitioner when we are ill and saying: "Fix it!" Most practitioners are quite willing to try to do just that - give you a prescription medication or suggest a surgical procedure that is designed to cure or fix your problem. Our expectation is that everything can be fixed if we just find the real problem and match this with the real cure. Pain doesn't necessarily work that way. In fact, most things in healthcare don't really work that way, but we all pretend they do - patients and doctors alike. With the exception of things like appendicitis and broken bones, most healthcare conditions have lifelong effects that must be dealt with sooner or later. In chronic pain, it just happens sooner rather than later. Quit fooling yourself early and get on with the business of managing chronic pain. Most of the things in this category of "things people do to you&" are temporary fixes rather than cures. They are useful in managing symptoms while you and your providers work on the category of "things you learn to do for yourself". That is not to say that many of these things people do to you are not beneficial. Some may control your symptoms for years. Some may need to be returned to and used even years from now when you are having a flare up of pain. Just don't think of them as a "cure". They are tools in your toolbox. Use the right tool for the job. If a small tap is needed - don't use a sledgehammer. Some of the more common things that fall into this category are:
Things You Learn To Do For Yourself The things you learn to do for yourself to manage your chronic pain are the most important in the long run. The more pain management skills you master, the more YOU control your chronic pain - without relying on other people to do something to you or control your treatment. You become more empowered. You are in charge - not the healthcare provider. Some of the more common things that fall into this category are:
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