Role of Pain Management and Intervention

1020 Words3 Pages

It all can begin with a long stressful day at work, lifting something heavy or even just getting up from your seat. It comes to you as your enemy. It attacks you until it’s controlled or eliminated. Some people live with it as something normal and some can’t live with it causing them death. It’s different in every way and in every person. Some people ignore it causing it to get out of control. Acute Pain may come suddenly and can be treated, but chronic pain makes your life miserable specially when uncontrolled (Cox, 2010). Pain may occur for many reasons; it can be related to a disease and injury or even after a surgery (Cox, 2010). It can cause your life to change, it can make you take medications every day and if alert, you will learn a lot from your body. According to Dopson, (2010) “Many who experienced chronic pain are unable to work, which adversely affects the economy. In 2000, it was estimated that the cost of back pain alone totaled 12 billion and today 119 million working days are lost per year due…(p.35).” Chronic pain can lasts three months or longer without being successful.

Now in days, chronic pain has become more common to hear patients complaining about. Chronic pain can be critical; it is known that chronic pain is usually pain that increases with time. Pain is identified by whatever the patient says it is (Cox, 2010). Usually a scale with numbers from 0-10 is use “0” meaning no pain and “10” meaning the worst pain ever (Cox, 2010). Chronic pain begins as acute then progresses as it gets worst (Cox, 2010). Chronic pain disables your living, changes your life, and can make you a weaker person (Dopson & Cox, 2010). On some people it causes disability. Most people with chronic pain live with it for their rest of ...

... middle of paper ...

...a certain movement, does it hurt all the time (Cox, 2010)? What make it feel better, what have you tired doing to alleviate pain (Cox, 2010)? All of these are good questions to ask the patient. By managing pain with medications, increasing patient’s activity, showing them how to be independent and using non-pharmacological interventions the patient will accomplish their state of well-being. (Dopson & Cox, 2010). Since pain interacts with patient’s life it should be assessed and treated correctly in order to help the patient have a normal life.

Works Cited

Cox, F. (2010). Basic principles of pain management:assessmant and intervention. Asrt & science pain series:1, 36-39.

Dopson, L., & Cox, F. (2010). Role of pain management programmes in chronic pain. art & science, 35-40.

Hinchy, S. (2010). The challenge of chronic pain. Primary Health Care, 26-29.

Open Document