How To Cope With Pain Blog header image 1


Psychiatric Pain Management: Learning Psychological Skills

June 8th, 2009 · 2 Comments

Welcome to the continuing series Why You Should See a Pain Management Psychiatrist.  This week we’ll look at what psychological skills you can learn to decrease and cope with pain.

There are many types of relaxation exercises you can learn.  Breathing, basic relaxation and visualization all help in several ways:

  • they help you relax and decrease anxiety
  • they decrease the stress response associated with pain
  • they help you get better sleep
  • they  may indirectly help decrease pain

Here are several from the How to Cope with Pain website:

Guided imagery and hypnosis, where suggestions of decreasing pain are paired with imagery, help in the same ways that relaxation exercises do.  In addition, these exercises can directly decrease pain through these suggestions.

Here are 2 examples of guided imagery exercises:

You can be taught all of these skills and then practice them regularly on your own.  That regular practice is key!

Other articles in the series:

  1. Why comprehensive treatment works better
  2. Benefits of a psychiatric evaluation
  3. Treatment of psychiatric symptoms
  4. Using psychiatric medications for pain
  5. Learning psychological skills
  6. Making positive behavioral changes
  7. Making positive psychological changes
  8. Benefits of supportive therapy
  9. Benefits of a pain support group
  10. New brain-based treatments

Sign up for free delivery of How to Cope with Pain by email or RSS feed. If you liked this post, I'd appreciate your recommending it at Reddit or StumbleUpon.

Tags: 1

2 responses so far ↓

Leave a Comment