QUESTION: My doctor never understands me when I tell him I'm in real pain.
How can I get the message across?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ANSWER: Pain is difficult to experience and, unfortunately, it can be
difficult to talk about. The way you experience pain is unique to you.
It may help to bring a checklist of information about your pain to your
physician. Write down when the pain started, whether there was a specific
cause, or whether it developed gradually. Is the pain intermittent or
constant? Are you in worse pain in certain positions, such as sitting or
laying down? How has the pain affected the quality of your life? Have you
taken any pain medications and have they helped at all?
Don't just say you are in pain, describe your pain. Words like cramping,
sharp, throbbing, aching, all give different information to your physician.
If, after you have tried this, your physician still does not understand, you
may have to consider finding a physician whose pain "vocabulary" matches
yours.
Friday, October 5, 2007
Communicating Pain to Your Doctor
Posted by N.J at 5:29 AM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
- ► 2008 (750)
-
▼
2007
(1429)
-
▼
October
(335)
-
▼
Oct 05
(47)
- Can Antacids Help Cure an Ulcer?
- Sore Throats and Strep
- Is it Possible to Cough Up a Stone?
- What Happens When You Don't Get Enough Sleep?
- Drug Avoidance for Nursing Mothers
- Beer Drinking and Milk Flow of Nursing Mothers
- Pregnancies that Occur Outside the Uterus
- ACROSS MY DESK: Pap Smear
- Recurrent Spontaneous Abortions
- Ovarian Cancer and Marital Problems
- Cancer and Love Life
- Cancer of the Prostrate: Causes and Treatments
- Healing Measures for Foot Ulcers
- Are Estrogens Safe?
- Is Low Back Pain Caused by Arthritis
- What is the Drug that Makes Your Skin Look Younger?
- Cause of Itchy Nipple
- Fat Removal by Suction
- Mastectomy and Follow-Up
- Pregnancy and Lifestyle
- How to Deal with PMS
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or "Yuppie Flu"
- Carrying Weights to Lose Weight
- Swimming for Bone Strengthening
- Heel Spurs and Chronic Heel Pain
- What are Shin Splints?
- Detection of Scoliosis
- Can Fluoride be Used to Treat Osteoporosis?
- Knee Braces and Football Injury Prevention
- Aren't Radon and Radium the Same Thing?
- How to Use Condoms
- Is There Danger In Eating Freshly Caught Fish?
- Why You Should Put Up with Cycling Helmets
- Is There Really Such a Thing as a Yuppie Flu?
- How to Stop Sucking Your Thumb
- What Makes Artificial Sweeteners Sweet?
- Explanation of Sheehan's Syndrome
- Are There Any Warning Signs to Predict a Suicide?
- Are There Any Warning Signs to Predict a Suicide?
- What are the Pros and Cons of the Whooping Cough V...
- Why Hasn't Penicillin Wiped Out All Pneumonias?
- Folk Medicines for Constipation
- Colic and Crying
- Pap Smear Classification
- Is There Such a Thing as a Male Contraceptive?
- Are Estrogens Used to Treat Osteoporosis?
- Communicating Pain to Your Doctor
-
▼
Oct 05
(47)
-
▼
October
(335)
0 Comments:
Post a Comment