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Stress and Clinical Medicine

Treatment of the Chronic Pain Patient

Pages 11-15 | Published online: 09 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

A small percentage of patients with persistent pain are sufficiently angry, demanding, and manipulative to require the negotiation of an explicit treatment and/or management contract. The very few studies in this field suggest that pain is both a function of and a stimulus to abnormal illness behavior, thus requiring special attention to therapeutic “ground rules.”

Treatment requires an unequivocal assertion by the patient that he wishes to get better and is willing to work at doing so; the specification of clearcut goals and the means of working towards them (“pacing behavior”); and the possible use of electrical neurostimulation and/or weak analgesics for pain control. Explicit understanding of mutual expectations and the patient's and doctor's “rights” is also helpful in fostering goodwill and desirable results.

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