DETROITMAN
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2011
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 1
I often feel very sad when I read the posts in this forum. Not just because of the pain and suffering that people are enduring but because there is a pattern which is frustratingly obvious, but which seems completely missed by the NHS.
The pattern seems to be this; the patient gets back pain, goes to GP, gets pain killers, this continues until patient recovers or gets bowel/bladder problems or pain that the drugs can no longer hide. At this stage the patient gets referred, has an MRI goes through the same cycle again or gets awful news about the mess their back is in and then gets offered an operation.... Now I know this is simplistic but its the basis of many posts here.
What seems to be missing is the recognition that generally, ignoring accidents, back problems and thus back pain seem to stem from lifestyle issues such as excessive times spent holding poor posture when standing or sitting, bad lifting practice and insufficient functional strength of the core muscles to support and protect the spine during daily activities. The pain and inflammation are simply the bodies way of telling the patient they are doing something wrong, or something is wrong and they need to do something about it.
What I find frustrating is that taking pain killers is basically a method of allowing us to ignore the messages the body is sending, allowing the patient to continue the situation that is causing damage to their body.
In my opinion part of the problem is this countries reliance on clinical trials to believe that something will help them. Drug companies spend huge sums of money to prove in clinical trials that their pain killer is better, safer etc than another and they make huge sums of money selling huge quantities of them. They still have side effects; but these are documented so acceptable. So these are 'prescribed' rather than suggesting potentially more appropriate solutions. The anecdotal evidence and small scale clinical trials for devices such as inversion tables, flexi-bak etc are ignored, along with the potential benefits from seeing a chiropractor, osteopath, massage therapist or practising Alexandria technique, Bowen therapy etc. There are a few doctors out there doing their own research on such things but unfortunately until they produce enough statistics to satisfy the sceptical medical community I fear the situation will continue.
Pete
The pattern seems to be this; the patient gets back pain, goes to GP, gets pain killers, this continues until patient recovers or gets bowel/bladder problems or pain that the drugs can no longer hide. At this stage the patient gets referred, has an MRI goes through the same cycle again or gets awful news about the mess their back is in and then gets offered an operation.... Now I know this is simplistic but its the basis of many posts here.
What seems to be missing is the recognition that generally, ignoring accidents, back problems and thus back pain seem to stem from lifestyle issues such as excessive times spent holding poor posture when standing or sitting, bad lifting practice and insufficient functional strength of the core muscles to support and protect the spine during daily activities. The pain and inflammation are simply the bodies way of telling the patient they are doing something wrong, or something is wrong and they need to do something about it.
What I find frustrating is that taking pain killers is basically a method of allowing us to ignore the messages the body is sending, allowing the patient to continue the situation that is causing damage to their body.
In my opinion part of the problem is this countries reliance on clinical trials to believe that something will help them. Drug companies spend huge sums of money to prove in clinical trials that their pain killer is better, safer etc than another and they make huge sums of money selling huge quantities of them. They still have side effects; but these are documented so acceptable. So these are 'prescribed' rather than suggesting potentially more appropriate solutions. The anecdotal evidence and small scale clinical trials for devices such as inversion tables, flexi-bak etc are ignored, along with the potential benefits from seeing a chiropractor, osteopath, massage therapist or practising Alexandria technique, Bowen therapy etc. There are a few doctors out there doing their own research on such things but unfortunately until they produce enough statistics to satisfy the sceptical medical community I fear the situation will continue.
Pete