Skip to content
My WebMD Sign In, Sign Up

Pain Management Health Center

Font Size

Living With Pain

Some people with chronic pain are seeking help from pain management specialists.
By
WebMD Feature

Donald feels like a new man. After years of enduring debilitating back pain, he's finally feeling well enough to coach his daughter's soccer team, to take his kids fishing and camping, and to go on a cruise with his wife. He said goodbye to sickness, short tempers, the heating pad, couch, sedating medication, and seemingly ineffective surgeries after he sought the services of a pain specialist.

"It's changed my whole life," says Donald, who now wears a prescribed patch on his upper arm, which steadily administers a pain-killing medicine.

Recommended Related to Pain Management

Handicap Parking Permits: How to Get One

If you have a chronic illness like arthritis or lung disease that makes it painful or difficult to walk, you might qualify for a handicapped parking permit. Ask your doctor about eligibility. People with limited mobility can save time, energy, and frustration when they park in handicapped parking spots near the entrances to businesses.  Each state has its own forms and criteria for handicapped parking permits. Typically, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) runs the program. Check...

Read the Handicap Parking Permits: How to Get One article > >

The 40-year-old registered nurse is resigned to the idea that he will probably be on drugs for the rest of his life because of permanent nerve damage. All the same, he's marveling at his renewed strength and capacity to think of something else besides pain.

Donald is one of many who have turned to pain management experts for help with never-ending hurts. The specialty is relatively new and still suffers from misconceptions, but it is gradually earning the acceptance and respect of both health professionals and the general public.

With acknowledgement have come the pressing questions: What causes chronic pain? How is it diagnosed? How is it treated?

Unfortunately, the answers don't come so readily, for there could be several reasons for the same affliction; there is no one way to identify and measure the physical distress; and there is no magic bullet for treatment.

The good news is that doctors are now paying more attention to the issue of pain and, as a result, there are more ways than ever to tackle the problem.

Yet in the near future looms a darker picture: aging baby boomers are expected to ache for quick fixes, faster than the medical establishment can possibly provide.

Nevertheless, the optimistic search for reasons and relief continues.

Today in Pain Management

man on cellphone
Slideshow
Dayplanner
Slideshow
 
Woman in gym
Slideshow
Pet scan depression
Article
 
foot conditions inherited
Video
lumbar spine
Slideshow
 
Woman opening window
Slideshow
Knee exercises
Slideshow
 
Woman shopping for vegetables
Slideshow
Sore feet with high heel shoes
Slideshow
 
acupuncture needles in woman's back
Slideshow
Hand on back
Slideshow
 

Special Sections