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PERSISTENT PAIN:
WHAT YOU CAN DO IN 10 MINUTES?
Richmond Stace MCSP MSc (Pain) BSc (Hons)
Specialist Pain Physiotherapist
patient
 Low back pain
 Headaches
 Multiple joint pain
 IBS
 Anxiety & low mood
 Picture the patient…..sitting in your office
First thoughts and feelings?
 Interested?
 Curious?
 Anxious?
 Frustrated?
 Excited?
 Worried?
Inner consultation
 What is your inner dialogue?
 What are you telling yourself?
 What questions are you asking yourself?
 Impact upon the consultation?
 Impact upon the person?
 Effect on next patient?
The problem of pain
 A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of
Disease (Vos et al. 2012)
 No. 2 -- back and neck pain
 No. 10 – migraine
 No. 11 – osteoarthritis
 No. 1 – depression
 How many have pain & depression?
 How many people are in pain for all reasons?
What is pain?
 Protection
 A protective device
 A motivator
 Compels action
 Survival
 Adaptive
 To the person, it hurts
What if pain persists?
 Why in some people and not others?
 Why in this person?
 What do they tell you in their story?
 What don’t they tell you?
Pain vulnerabilities
 Why is there on-going protection?
 Reasons why pain may persist:
 Prior experiences of pain
 Kindling or priming
 Functional pain syndromes
 E.g./ IBS, pelvic pain, migraine
 Existing sensitivity
 On-going stress/anxiety
 Genetics
The story
 Patient story
 Needs validating
 We acknowledge their suffering with compassion
 Needs meaning
 How have they got to the present moment
 Nothing happens in isolation
 Gives clues…
Here’s a story…
 Leg pain 18/12, worsening
 Incident => pain but no injury
 Previous leg pain
 Sensitive digestive system
 Insomniac
 Has nothing to do with my pain
 I don’t have any stresses….
 About to start IVF
Pain
 Pain is not an accurate indicator of tissue
damage
 It is the person who experiences pain, not the
body part
 Shift in sense of self
 Pain is a response to a perceived threat
 Pain is experienced in a ‘space’
 What is threatening?
 A movement, an action, a thought?
What I am feeling now…
 Is the brain’s best guess
 Selection of a hypothesis
 What does all this sensory information infer?
 What does it infer based on what I know?
 What does it infer based on what has
happened before?
 Pain, pain, pain, pain, pain….
 A prediction
The person
 Beliefs
 Expectations
 Thoughts
 Movements & posturing
 Role in life: work, home
 Lifestyle patterns
 Ever changing….adapting…learning
The person in pain
 How do they change?
 Body sense
 Movement
 Planning
 Thinking
 Emotions
 Perception
 Self
What story are they telling
themselves?
 The story of their pain
 Cause and effect
 I must avoid….
 I can’t….
All consuming
 Pain can pervade into all aspects of existence
 Feeling
 Thinking
 Sensing
 The lived experience
 Moment by moment
Biology of pain?
 Where is it?
 Whole person
 Many body systems that protect
 Most of it is not where the pain is lived
 A thought about the pain is biology
 ‘Biology in the dark’
Where is the pain coming from?
What influences pain?
 The way we think about it; the meaning to ‘me’
 Beliefs about pain
 Attentional bias – vigilance to body
 Stress (threat)
 Tiredness – more sensitive, less resilient
 Context
 Environment
 Prior experience
Stress and pain
 Pain is a stressor
 Chronic stress => more inflamed
 Situation => perception/meaning => response
 Prepared for/reacting to perceived threat
 Systems ready
 Systems dampened: GI, reproductive
Think of a time…
 ….when you were feeling stressed
 How do you feel now?
 Where did you feel it?
 What did you feel it with?
 Your mind -- where is your mind?
 Embodied cognition
 No separation of body-brain-mind-environment
 ‘Whole person’
Sleep and pain
 Sleep problems appear to predict onset of
chronic pain
 Predict persistency and increase in pain levels
 Effect of pain on sleep less strong
 We need sleep! And a good period of sleep
Improving sleep
 Calm conditions before bed
 Bath, mindfulness, reading
 Associate bed with sleep
 Unhelpful thoughts – mindful practice
 Lifestyle patterns
 Eating time
 Refresh and renew through the day
Pause
Functional pain syndromes
 IBS
 Migraine
 Pelvic pain
 Dysmenorrhoea
 vulvodynia
 Fibromyalgia
 Often with:
 Anxiety
 Hypermobility
Functional Pain Syndromes (2)
 Vulnerable to persisting pain
 Common adaptations underpinning all
 Protection
 Perception of threat: cues & triggers widen
 Great example of need to tackle whole person
Getting better
 What is getting better?
 Who gets better?
 I am better
 The person gets better
 Who do we treat?
Who gets better?
 Those who understand their pain
 Those who use their working knowledge of
pain
 Those who use their strengths
 Those who persevere
 Those who focus on an outcome not the pain
 Those who see the flare-up as a challenge to
overcome
 Those who deal with distractions
What does an approach need?
 To be a lived experience
 Be available moment to moment
 Promote independence
 A focus on the outcome
 For the ‘action’ to change the prediction
 At any given moment
Pain Coach
 Coaching the person to become their own
coach
 What do I think? What do I do?
 Create the conditions for the desired outcome
 Outcome focused – their vision of healthy self
 A blend of pain neuroscience and strengths
based coaching
 Getting the best out of a person
 Maximising their potential
The early messages
 Set the scene
 Need to be accurate
 Need to answer:
 What is wrong?
 What do I need to do?
 What will you (clinician) do?
 How long will it take?
Mature Organism Model
10 minutes to….
 Listen
 Work out what is happening
 Explain
 Make a plan
 Take some action
 Patient’s perception of the consultation?
 Their reality
How long does it take for pain to change?
 Pain – No pain
 On – off
 Pain is not constant
 Each moment is new
 Each moment is an opportunity
 You cannot not change!
The potency of you…know
that…
 Behind your words
 Knowledge
 Insight
 Understanding
 A trusted advisor, a coach
 You are a ‘drug’ affecting their physiology
 Compassion
 Approach
 Words of advice
Understand pain
 Understand pain to change pain – explain it
 What is pain?
 What is their pain about?
 Specific to them and their story
 Creates a foundation to start reducing threat
 Working knowledge: what do I think? What do I
do?
 Independence, control, empowered
 Pain is about perceived threat
 Reduce the threat = reduce pain
UP | Understand Pain
 @upandsing
 understandpain.co
m
Actions (1)
 Referral
 Reasons explained
 Investigation(s)
 Reasons explained
 Lifestyle advice
 Reasons explained
 Influencing pain; e.g. sleep pattern, stress
Actions (2)
 Further information
 Quality reading material, website
 Medication
 Reasons and explanation of how it works
 Expectations primed
 Foundation of understanding that
creates ‘safety’, confidence and
motivation
 Changing their perception/relationship
with pain
For you: keeping your clarity
 Focused attention (mindfulness)
 Breathing between patients
 Movement between patients
 Greeting style as a way to shape session
 Actions emerge from clear thinking,
engagement & compassion
The person needs to…
 Understand their pain
 Understand what influences their pain
 Understand what they can and must do
 Understand that their pain can and does
change
 Show them and give examples
 Focus on their desired outcome
 Know they are believed and supported
Pain Coach
 Coaching the person to be
their own coach
 Realise their independence
 Moment to moment decisions
 Moment to moment actions
 Pointed towards desired
outcome
 Optimising potential
 Resume a meaningful life
 I feel like ‘me’ again
And relax
Thank you
 www.understandpain.com
 www.specialistpainphysio.com
 @painphysio
 @upandsing
 painphysiolondon@gmail.com

More Related Content

GP Talk 30.4.16

  • 1. PERSISTENT PAIN: WHAT YOU CAN DO IN 10 MINUTES? Richmond Stace MCSP MSc (Pain) BSc (Hons) Specialist Pain Physiotherapist
  • 2. patient  Low back pain  Headaches  Multiple joint pain  IBS  Anxiety & low mood  Picture the patient…..sitting in your office
  • 3. First thoughts and feelings?  Interested?  Curious?  Anxious?  Frustrated?  Excited?  Worried?
  • 4. Inner consultation  What is your inner dialogue?  What are you telling yourself?  What questions are you asking yourself?  Impact upon the consultation?  Impact upon the person?  Effect on next patient?
  • 5. The problem of pain  A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease (Vos et al. 2012)  No. 2 -- back and neck pain  No. 10 – migraine  No. 11 – osteoarthritis  No. 1 – depression  How many have pain & depression?  How many people are in pain for all reasons?
  • 6. What is pain?  Protection  A protective device  A motivator  Compels action  Survival  Adaptive  To the person, it hurts
  • 7. What if pain persists?  Why in some people and not others?  Why in this person?  What do they tell you in their story?  What don’t they tell you?
  • 8. Pain vulnerabilities  Why is there on-going protection?  Reasons why pain may persist:  Prior experiences of pain  Kindling or priming  Functional pain syndromes  E.g./ IBS, pelvic pain, migraine  Existing sensitivity  On-going stress/anxiety  Genetics
  • 9. The story  Patient story  Needs validating  We acknowledge their suffering with compassion  Needs meaning  How have they got to the present moment  Nothing happens in isolation  Gives clues…
  • 10. Here’s a story…  Leg pain 18/12, worsening  Incident => pain but no injury  Previous leg pain  Sensitive digestive system  Insomniac  Has nothing to do with my pain  I don’t have any stresses….  About to start IVF
  • 11. Pain  Pain is not an accurate indicator of tissue damage  It is the person who experiences pain, not the body part  Shift in sense of self  Pain is a response to a perceived threat  Pain is experienced in a ‘space’  What is threatening?  A movement, an action, a thought?
  • 12. What I am feeling now…  Is the brain’s best guess  Selection of a hypothesis  What does all this sensory information infer?  What does it infer based on what I know?  What does it infer based on what has happened before?  Pain, pain, pain, pain, pain….  A prediction
  • 13. The person  Beliefs  Expectations  Thoughts  Movements & posturing  Role in life: work, home  Lifestyle patterns  Ever changing….adapting…learning
  • 14. The person in pain  How do they change?  Body sense  Movement  Planning  Thinking  Emotions  Perception  Self
  • 15. What story are they telling themselves?  The story of their pain  Cause and effect  I must avoid….  I can’t….
  • 16. All consuming  Pain can pervade into all aspects of existence  Feeling  Thinking  Sensing  The lived experience  Moment by moment
  • 17. Biology of pain?  Where is it?  Whole person  Many body systems that protect  Most of it is not where the pain is lived  A thought about the pain is biology  ‘Biology in the dark’
  • 18. Where is the pain coming from?
  • 19. What influences pain?  The way we think about it; the meaning to ‘me’  Beliefs about pain  Attentional bias – vigilance to body  Stress (threat)  Tiredness – more sensitive, less resilient  Context  Environment  Prior experience
  • 20. Stress and pain  Pain is a stressor  Chronic stress => more inflamed  Situation => perception/meaning => response  Prepared for/reacting to perceived threat  Systems ready  Systems dampened: GI, reproductive
  • 21. Think of a time…  ….when you were feeling stressed  How do you feel now?  Where did you feel it?  What did you feel it with?  Your mind -- where is your mind?  Embodied cognition  No separation of body-brain-mind-environment  ‘Whole person’
  • 22. Sleep and pain  Sleep problems appear to predict onset of chronic pain  Predict persistency and increase in pain levels  Effect of pain on sleep less strong  We need sleep! And a good period of sleep
  • 23. Improving sleep  Calm conditions before bed  Bath, mindfulness, reading  Associate bed with sleep  Unhelpful thoughts – mindful practice  Lifestyle patterns  Eating time  Refresh and renew through the day
  • 24. Pause
  • 25. Functional pain syndromes  IBS  Migraine  Pelvic pain  Dysmenorrhoea  vulvodynia  Fibromyalgia  Often with:  Anxiety  Hypermobility
  • 26. Functional Pain Syndromes (2)  Vulnerable to persisting pain  Common adaptations underpinning all  Protection  Perception of threat: cues & triggers widen  Great example of need to tackle whole person
  • 27. Getting better  What is getting better?  Who gets better?  I am better  The person gets better  Who do we treat?
  • 28. Who gets better?  Those who understand their pain  Those who use their working knowledge of pain  Those who use their strengths  Those who persevere  Those who focus on an outcome not the pain  Those who see the flare-up as a challenge to overcome  Those who deal with distractions
  • 29. What does an approach need?  To be a lived experience  Be available moment to moment  Promote independence  A focus on the outcome  For the ‘action’ to change the prediction  At any given moment
  • 30. Pain Coach  Coaching the person to become their own coach  What do I think? What do I do?  Create the conditions for the desired outcome  Outcome focused – their vision of healthy self  A blend of pain neuroscience and strengths based coaching  Getting the best out of a person  Maximising their potential
  • 31. The early messages  Set the scene  Need to be accurate  Need to answer:  What is wrong?  What do I need to do?  What will you (clinician) do?  How long will it take?
  • 33. 10 minutes to….  Listen  Work out what is happening  Explain  Make a plan  Take some action  Patient’s perception of the consultation?  Their reality
  • 34. How long does it take for pain to change?  Pain – No pain  On – off  Pain is not constant  Each moment is new  Each moment is an opportunity  You cannot not change!
  • 35. The potency of you…know that…  Behind your words  Knowledge  Insight  Understanding  A trusted advisor, a coach  You are a ‘drug’ affecting their physiology  Compassion  Approach  Words of advice
  • 36. Understand pain  Understand pain to change pain – explain it  What is pain?  What is their pain about?  Specific to them and their story  Creates a foundation to start reducing threat  Working knowledge: what do I think? What do I do?  Independence, control, empowered  Pain is about perceived threat  Reduce the threat = reduce pain
  • 37. UP | Understand Pain  @upandsing  understandpain.co m
  • 38. Actions (1)  Referral  Reasons explained  Investigation(s)  Reasons explained  Lifestyle advice  Reasons explained  Influencing pain; e.g. sleep pattern, stress
  • 39. Actions (2)  Further information  Quality reading material, website  Medication  Reasons and explanation of how it works  Expectations primed  Foundation of understanding that creates ‘safety’, confidence and motivation  Changing their perception/relationship with pain
  • 40. For you: keeping your clarity  Focused attention (mindfulness)  Breathing between patients  Movement between patients  Greeting style as a way to shape session  Actions emerge from clear thinking, engagement & compassion
  • 41. The person needs to…  Understand their pain  Understand what influences their pain  Understand what they can and must do  Understand that their pain can and does change  Show them and give examples  Focus on their desired outcome  Know they are believed and supported
  • 42. Pain Coach  Coaching the person to be their own coach  Realise their independence  Moment to moment decisions  Moment to moment actions  Pointed towards desired outcome  Optimising potential  Resume a meaningful life  I feel like ‘me’ again
  • 44. Thank you  www.understandpain.com  www.specialistpainphysio.com  @painphysio  @upandsing  painphysiolondon@gmail.com