Life Hacks to Teach Chronic Pain Patients: Updated
With ever increasing scrutiny of opioid practices and limited availability of new therapies for pain, it can be a difficult time to be a pain clinician and a desperate time for patients with pain. Fortunately, all healthcare professionals can provide patients with self-management tools for living with pain. In this session, participants will learn how to help patients recognize the impact that negative thoughts, emotions, and poor sleep can have on the experience of pain. Teaching patients a simplified version of the gate control theory of pain is a critical first step for helping them understand their pain experience. The dialogue for explaining this mind-body connection will be explored in this session as well as life hacks for positive thinking and self-talk, distraction, relaxation, improved sleep, and much more! New for PAINWeek 2020, we will also share our experience in bringing a 6-week, evidence-based pain self-management workshop to chronic pain patients in our community.
Learning Objectives
- Recognize the impact that thoughts, emotions, and behaviors can have on the pain experience for individual patients.
- Describe the gate control theory of pain using simplified language for patients and caregivers
- Identify self-management tools (“life hacks”) that can be taught to patients, regardless of the setting
Additional Information
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Laura Meyer-Junco, PharmD, BCPS, CPE
Clinical Assistant Professor
University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) College of Pharmacy
Rockford, Illinois
Available Credit
- 1.00 AAFP
- 1.00 AANP
- 1.00 ACCME (All Other)
- 1.00 ACCME (MD/DO Only)
- 1.00 ACPE Pharmacy
- 1.00 ANCC
- 1.00 APA
Required Hardware/software
A computer with an internet connection
Internet Browser: Internet Explorer 7.x or higher, Firefox 4.x or higher, Safari 2.x or higher, or any other W3C standards compliant browser
Other additional software may be required such as PowerPoint or Adobe Acrobat Reader.