Home | Our Services | News You Can Use | Frank Lindner, CRC, LMHC | Cynthia Lindner, MS | Client Resources | Positive Changes | Stop Smoking | Pain | Weight Loss | Stress | Healing Trauma | Couples | Insurance | Hypnosis FAQs | Corporate Programs
Pain Management
Counseling and Hypnotherapy
ahp_blu_morpho.jpg

You Can Feel Good Again

 Pain Manangement

Pain management encompasses pharmacological and nonpharmacological approaches to prevent, reduce, or stop pain sensations.  This discussion will focus on nonpharmacological pain management interventions, including relaxation training, cognitive behavioral training, distraction, and therapeutic hypnosis.

Coping With Pain
 
There are many ways of coping with pain, for this discussion, let us look at passive and active  coping strategies.  Active coping strategies are those that involve the patient taking responsibility for pain management, and efforts of returning to or maintain functioning in spite of the pain.  Active coping can include participating in physical therapy or other exercise plan, relaxation for reducing mental strain, and distracting one's attention from pain.  Participating in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and learning and using Self-Hypnosis are both active strategies for managing pain.  Passive Coping strategies involve giving responsibility for pain management to an outside source or allowing other areas of life to be adversely affected by one's pain.  Some examples of this are reducing or cancelling social activites, focusing on the pain and the suffering, and engaging in negative self-talk such as "This pain is unbearable.", "I can't get comfortable", and "I wish my doctor would prescribe better pain medication for me."  Very often pain patients will use both types of strategies, depending on day-to-day circumstances, and their over-all level of adjustment to their health challenges.
 
The decade of the 90's produced volumes of research on pain.  Hypnosis, Biofeedback, Relaxation and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy were studied and compared for efficacy in treating chronic back pain, arthritis pain, headache, jaw pain, cancer pain, and pain associated with medical procedures for cancer treatment. Utilizing these techniques are active ways of coping with pain.

The thoughts that we think, and the emotions we feel impact our physical body just as conditions of our physical body impact out thoughts and emotions. This seems like it should be obvious, but what is not so obvious is the chemical changes that occur in the body that make this connection happen. Authors Herbert Benson, MD, Andrew Weil, MD and also Deepak Chopra, MD have written volumes about the mind-body connection, integrative medicine and behavioral health. Mind-body medicine integrates modern scientific medicine, psychology, nursing, nutrition, exercise physiology and belief to enhance the innate healing capacities of body and mind.

Studies have shown that between 60% and 90% of all physician visits are for stress-related complaints. Through more than thirty years of research and clinical practice, Herbert Benson, MD and his colleagues have proven the efficacy of mind-body medicine in the treatment of these complaints to the extent that they are caused by or made worse by stress. Mind-body medicine strategies have helped millions of people reduce the stress that can cause or aggravate conditions. Clinical findings that support the use of mind-body approaches include:

  • Chronic pain patients reduce their physician visits by 36%. The Clinical Journal of Pain, Volume 2, pages 305-310, 1991
    There is approximately a 50% reduction in visits to a HMO after a relaxation-response based intervention that resulted in estimated significant cost savings. Behavioral Medicine, Volume 16, pages 165-173, 1990
    Open-heart surgery patients have fewer post-operative complications. Behavioral Medicine, Volume 5, pages 111-117, 1989
    One hundred percent of insomnia patients reported improved sleep and 91% either eliminated or reduced sleeping medication use. The American Journal of Medicine, Volume 100, pages 212-216, 1996
    Women with severe PMS have a 57% reduction in physical and psychological symptoms. Obstetrics and Gynecology, Volume 75, pages 649-655, April, 1990

These mind-body approaches work because they go beyond the physical to address the patterns, attitudes and behaviors that surround health. They deal with the cycle of stress, anxiety, tension, symptoms, and disease. They teach individuals to break imbedded harmful beliefs, develop positive attitudes, and to implement new strategies for healthy behaviors.

"Over 35 million adults use mind/body approaches for better health."                                        

                                         -- Dr. Herbert Benson

Hypnosis Eases The Pain of Childbirth and Labor

Self-hypnosis for relaxation during childbirth allows mothers to utilize their inner resources and focus their mind-body to have a natural and more satisfying birthing experience.  Modern medical interventions can be credited with saving lives and easing the pain and suffering  of  many.  However, for the majority of women, the natural process of childbirth shouldn't require too many interventions.  Women need more options for preparing for birthing so that they can be active participants in the process. 

Hypnosis is an excellent tool to aid childbirth and promote a calmer, more comfortable pregnancy.  Research has shown that mothers who experience a high level of stress during pregnancy tend to have a more difficult time giving birth and the stress also has an adverse effect on the baby. Stress can create changes in mother's body that restrict blood flow, and oxygen to the baby.  Other studies have found that oxygenation to the baby is increased when pregnant women relax during hypnosis.

  • Hypnosis has been shown to reduce the time spent in labor by as much as 50 percent.
  • Hypnosis can alter perceptions of pain.
  • Hypnosis can be used to distort time, so that contractions seem to last for only a moment.
  • As an analgesic for labor and delivery, self-hypnosis is safe for the baby and is non-sedating for the mother.
  • If chemical anesthesia or analgesia is needed or desired, smaller amounts can be effective when used together with self-hypnosis.

Women who have used hypnosis for pregnancy, labor and delivery enjoy being an aware and active participant in the birthing process, and bonding with the new baby, while maintaining a reasonable comfort level.      

Consult Your Health Care Provider
About Adding Mind-Body Therapies

Doctor

To Your Treatment Plan

 
Advanced Hypnotherapy
And Counseling Office
1000 Main Street
Port Jefferson, NY 11777

(631) 473-0405

Our Services

Copyright 1996 through 2008, by C. Lindner. All rights reserved.