{"id":4532,"date":"2021-03-15T14:24:09","date_gmt":"2021-03-15T14:24:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.neuraxpharm.com\/ie\/?p=4532"},"modified":"2022-12-13T10:07:15","modified_gmt":"2022-12-13T10:07:15","slug":"living-with-chronic-pain","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.neuraxpharm.com\/ie\/blog\/living-with-chronic-pain","title":{"rendered":"Living with chronic pain"},"content":{"rendered":"

Dictionary definitions don\u2019t do it justice. Chronic pain is a complex condition that is rarely solved quickly and often requires emotional as well as physical solutions.<\/p>\n

The pain can be anything from dull, persistent aches to sharp attacks and burning sensations in affected areas of any part of the body and to be chronic it has to last \u2013 in a steady or intermittent state \u2013 for at least 12 weeks.<\/p>\n

Major sources of chronic pain are musculoskeletal problems, migraines and headaches, fibromyalgia, arthritis, cancer, diabetes and neurological conditions but subjective and personal elements make it difficult to establish a root cause and to measure its impact.<\/p>\n

But its burden is clear as it disrupts a person\u2019s physical and psychological function with devastating effect, radiating problems across family, friendship groups and employment.<\/p>\n

Chronic pain is a major cause of disability and has the potential to infect all aspects of life. Pain Alliance Europe, an organisation covering medical experts and patient groups, estimates that 95 million people in Europe are living with chronic pain and regularly have to contend with discrimination and stigma at work and in their social lives.1<\/sup><\/p>\n

The far-reaching implications of living with chronic pain were highlighted by The Pain Proposal, an independent group of European experts, who collated research showing that sufferers endured social isolation, worried about relationships and losing their jobs and experienced a negative impact on friends and family.2<\/sup><\/p>\n

This was reinforced by a study published in the European Journal of Pain3<\/sup> that recorded the impact on people living with chronic pain:<\/p>\n