Natural Pain Relief May Save Your Life!
Natural pain relief… don’t you need drugs? This was a question during my recent seminar. A good question that deserves a good answer, especially since we’re conditioned to use drugs to ease pain, most often nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like aspirin and Advil and acetaminophen (Tylenol).
These drugs aren’t as friendly as their advertisements suggest. Taking them can have serious, even life-threatening consequences.The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reports that NSAID-induced disease causes at least 103,000 hospitalizations per year and every year 16,500 arthritis patients die from NSAID-related gastrointestinal damage. These drugs increase the chance of a heart attack or stroke and cause ulcers and bleeding in the stomach and intestines. These side effects can happen suddenly without warning symptoms and may cause sudden death. Acetaminophen, found in many over the counter (OTC) products such as Tylenol, cold medicines and prescription drugs like Vicodin and Percocet is widely used for pain relief and fever. Though generally considered safe when used according to the directions on its labeling it can cause liver damage and even death according to a FDA 2009 consumer update. Because it’s so often used in combination with other OTC drugs its easy to over dose. Fortunately, natural pain relief products and therapies are as effective as pharmaceuticals without the side effects. Here are a few of the most common.
Natural Pain Relief
Most importantly…before you choose a treatment method identify the cause of your pain.
“LEARNS” offers a helpful acronym to 6 steps for finding and treating the cause of pain: listen to your body; evaluate possible pain causes; action taking; results-how is it working; new information-change your plan; seek professional help if needed.
LEARNS: 6 Steps to Natural Pain Relief
Listen to your body.
Sounds silly, but too often in our busy lives we don’t notice subtle cues that something we’re doing or some situation we’re in is hurting us. Anyone with chronic tendonitis or fasciitis will tell you they wished they had listened to their body before chronic inflammation… chronic pain set in. The old adage of “no pain, no gain” is just plain wrong. Those in the know now say you should rest from an activity when pain develops. The body needs rest to recover… to heal. This holds true for stress too. Stress causes physical responses in your body that tightens muscles and constricts blood flow leading to headaches and other forms of musculoskeletal pain. Pain can be a real blessing giving you information on changes you need to make to have a happy, healthful life.
Evaluate possible pain causes.
Now that you’re catching your body’s pain signals earlier, use the “Four Ws” to uncover possible causes, then decide which cause is most likely. This exercise works best when relaxed, so take some private, personal time to do it. You might try writing about your pain for 15 minutes addressing these questions.Where is the pain located?When did you first notice the pain? What activity or situation is associated with the pain? Why did this activity or situation lead to pain?
Action taking.
Take action on what you learned. Treat the cause of the pain. Maybe your action is resting from an activity or reducing the stress of a situation you’re experiencing at work or at home. You may want to try some of the natural remedies mentioned earlier or the pain may be so significant that you decide you need professional help.
Results-how is it working?
Pay attention to how your treatment is working. Develop ongoing body awareness. Is your pain gradually improving, are there situations or activities that make it worse?
New information-change your plan.
Keep updating your treatment plan as you learn more about what helps and what harms healing by listening to your pain. Your body normally can heal itself in 4 to 6 weeks.
Seek professional help if needed.
If your body hasn’t righted itself after 6 weeks see your health provider for a professional evaluation and treatment of your pain. Make sure you receive a diagnosis (the cause of your pain) and treatment that adequately addresses this cause, not just symptom treatment (pain medications). Too often, drugs and surgery form the bedrock of mainstream medical treatment. If you’re not satisfied with both the diagnosis and treatment plan, get a second opinion from a doctor who provides natural medicine. Treat your pain with the respect it deserves. Use the six LEARNS steps to develop your treatment plan and avoid pharmaceuticals whenever possible. Natural pain relief can provide new insights that end up improving all aspects of your life.
Natural Pain Relief Sources and Resources
Andrew Weil, “Can I Reduce My Joint Pain Naturally?” Prevention (January, 2007) at http://www.prevention.com/health/health/health-experts/can-i-reduce-my-joint-pain-naturally/article/847f8169c1903110VgnVCM20000012281eac____.Chris Bleakley, Suzanne McDonough, and MacAuley Domhnall, “The Use of Ice in the Treatment of Acute Soft-Tissue Injury: A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials,” American Journal Sports Medicine 32, no. 1 (2004): 251-61. Joseph Charles Maroon and Jeffrey W. Bost, “w-3 Fatty Acids (Fish Oil) as an Anti-Inflammatory: An Alternative to Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs for Discogenic Pain,” Surgical Neurology 65, no.4 (April 2006). Mayo Clinic Staff, “Sprain: First Aide,” at http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/first-aid-sprain/FA00016. Nancy Moore, The Cure for Chronic Pain: End the Pain of Arthritis, Sports Injury, and Other Joint Problems (Peoria Az: Intermedia Publishing Group, 2009). National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, “Analysis of National Survey Reveals Perceived Benefit of CAM for Back Pain” at http://nccam.nih.gov/research/results/spotlight/060110.htm. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, “Acetaminophen and Liver Injury: Q & A for Consumers” at http://www.fda.gov/forconsumers/consumerupdates/ucm168830.htm. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, “Medication Guide for Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs)” at http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/DrugSafety/UCM135935.pdf.
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