A Compelling Look at Pain Relief
If your back aches when you're loading groceries in the car or your hands cramp up with arthritis when you sit down at the computer, you're not alone. Although the nature, cause, and complaints vary, over one-half of Americans experience chronic or recurrent pain, a recent survey conducted by the Stanford University Medical Center found.
Pain is your brain's signal that there is trouble a brew in your body, akin to the 'Check Engine' light in your car - a warning mechanism prompting you to take care of a situation that will otherwise worsen. And while its advantages are obvious in situations of acute pain - like when you accidentally cut your finger chopping vegetables or twist your ankle playing soccer, sufferers of chronic pain cannot easily remedy the source of their ailment. The pain takes a toll on their quality of life - impairing mood, sleep, and the ability to perform enjoyable activities like sports and necessary tasks at work. It is hardly surprising, then, that Americans spend $1 out of every $7 dollars they earn seeking pain relief.
Pain relief treatments are as varied as the types of pain we suffer from, the most popular being prescription medicines and over-the-counter treatments. Other commonly used therapies include massage, chiropractic visits, time-tested home remedies and simple bed rest. Many also find that light exercise and stretching help alleviate their pain.
As physicians, researchers, and the public have become increasingly interested in exploring the link between mind and body, yoga, meditation and even laughing clinics - where patients, led by a "laughing coach", attempt to giggle, snort, and chortle their way to pain relief - have seen a corresponding upsurge in popularity. These treatments, along with acupuncture and homeopathic and herbal remedies, are also beginning to gain credibility within the medical community, as medical study findings seem to validate their beneficial effect on those suffering from pain.
At the other end of the spectrum, surgery still remains an appealing option for some, hoping that drastic measures will result in dramatic pain relief.
With all these treatments, it's a wonder we're not all skipping down the street, whistling a happy tune, right? The thing is, for some reason, these treatments often aren't having the effect those who tried them had hoped. While the majority of respondents in the Stanford survey cited above report that the various therapies they have tried work at least "somewhat well", few say any treatment has worked "very well".
Physicians and many patients note that the most effective treatment is a combination of various remedies, the exact mixture varying from person to person. Although it can be frustrating to continually alter and tweak your course of treatment, you must remember that pain relief is more often the result of a process than a magic pill.
Pain Relief Info provides detailed information on arthritis, back, joint, lower back, natural, chronic, neck, sciatica, knee, fibromyalgia, and muscle pain relief. Pain Relief Info is the sister site of Acid Reflux Web.
Latest News
![]() ChattahBox | Are Your Kids in Danger: Cold Medicine Recall Request by Some Doctors National Ledger, AZ - As parents deal with all of the information and counter information about cold medicine and kids we can now toss another request into the mix. ... Video: Cold Meds Under Fire, Again Children's Cough Medicine Recall Requested By Physicians Survey Finds Nearly Two-Thirds of Parents Considering Changing the ... |
![]() The Plain Dealer - cleveland.com | Publication in Annals of Internal Medicine Highlights Clinical ... WELT ONLINE, Germany - EXACT Sciences Corporation (NASDAQ: EXAS) today announced the publication in the Annals of Internal Medicine the findings of a National Institutes of ... Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for Oct.7, 2008, issue Task force: Colon cancer screenings can stop at 75 Northeast Ohio Health and Medical Consumer News |
US Preventive Medicine: Economic Crisis Creates Opportunity in ... MarketWatch - During this downturn, companies generating double or triple digit annualized growth trends, such as US Preventive Medicine, could be regarded as safe havens ... |
Academic Medicine Means Business for Ohio: $37.2 Billion Economic ... MarketWatch - Quantifying academic medicine's economic impact in areas ranging from tax revenue to job creation, the report underscores the significant role Ohio's seven ... UC College of Medicine generates $4.8 billion in economic impact Health network's impact: $4.8 billion Claiborne hospital receives USDA grant |
![]() Washington Post | Nobel medicine prize reopens old AIDS wounds Reuters South Africa, South Africa - By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor WASHINGTON, Oct 6 (Reuters) - The decision on Monday to award the Nobel Prize for Medicine to Luc Montagnier and ... European Researchers Win Nobels for Medicine Three Europeans Win the 2008 Nobel for Medicine Noble Medicine |
![]() Special Broadcasting Service | Medicine award kicks off Nobel Prize announcements The Associated Press - Only seven women have won the medicine prize since the first Nobel Prizes were handed out in 1901. The last female winner was US researcher Linda Buck in ... The Nobel Prize |
Hospital ushers in new sports medicine program Effingham Herald, GA - Effingham Hospital sponsored Effingham Hospital Sports Medicine Night at Rebel Field on Sept. 26, just before the football game between South Effingham High ... |
IM Pei's firm to help design VCU School of Medicine Richmond Times Dispatch, VA - A team that includes an internationally known architectural firm has been selected to design the $138 million School of Medicine building on the Virginia ... |
![]() Financial Times | Medicine for a sector Financial Times, UK - In September this year, Pierre Fabre, a struggling privately held family-run medicines and skincare products group based in Castres in south-west France, ... |
Don't demonise traditional medicine, says MEC Independent Online, South Africa - Radebe said traditional medicine was helpful and had been used by many generations, adding that 80 percent of people used traditional medicine in South ... |
Resources
-
Sorry Currently Unavailable




