Cooperating In Our Health Care
12:16 AM
Posted by عين الحية
Funny thing pain, if you’ve never had a severe pain then the  suggestion of taking simple analgesia and resting the affected area all  seems quite reasonable.  I was reminded of this when I read recently of a  doctor’s advice to someone who was suffering from sciatica.  Having  personally experienced sciatica, it’s a condition I would not recommend  to anyone who wishes to walk, sit, laugh, sleep, or to just simply pull  up your trousers.  It’s a bit like a dentist drilling your teeth without  an anaesthetic, but it affects your whole leg.  In other words the pain  is consuming, exhausting and without respite.  Clinical studies do show  that in the majority of cases the pain will eventually subside and  surgery may not be necessary, but in the meantime the patient has to  deal with the pain or deal with the medication required to dull the  pain.  Remember, pain-killers are not selective to the area affected.   They affect the whole of the nervous system and elsewhere so there may  be significant side-effects from these medications. 
Dealing with severe pain can be a complex issue, but I suggest that  you have to treat this sort of pain fairly aggressively as acute severe  pain is relatively easier to treat than chronic severe pain.  In the  early stages of an injury or insult to an area of the body, most of the  pathological processes are happening at the site of the injury or  insult.  Throughout time the brain begins to modulate this pain and so  no only do you have the injured area to deal with, but you also have  complex neural pathways within the brain to deal with as well.  This  often means a far more complex management plan and a far more protracted  recovery time.  Specialists are very skilled at dealing with these  issues but they do rely heavily on the stories their patients give them.   That means being honest in answering their questions and not being  heroic with a grin and bear it grimace! Often the use of a pain scale is  helpful with zero being no pain at all and a 10 being the worse pain  you have ever experienced. 
Another health issue we commonly down play is influenza.  Over the  years I have frequently heard people say that they would not have the  flu vaccine because either they never get the flu or that they had it  last week for a couple of days and then it was all over! Influenza is a  serious debilitating disease that will usually last from 10 days to two  weeks and often leave you flat on your back exhausted.  It’s not a happy  10 days either as patients do not have the energy to read a magazine or  even watch a DVD.  You will literally feel ancient with every movement  being a real challenge and that doesn’t include the aching all over or  the fevers and sleepless nights.  The influenza virus is also extremely  contagious and most people are unaware that if you spread it to someone  who is more frail than yourself that you may actually be putting their  life at risk. 
With the ‘flu the big challenge is to vaccinate as many people in the  community as possible, including children, those employed and  unemployed, the elderly and the infirm, to reduce the chance of an  epidemic occurring.  Recent research has also showed that vaccinating  pregnant women in the last trimester of their pregnancy will help  protect their new born infants born during the ‘flu season. 
Medicine has evolved over the last 40 years, but the change has been  fairly slow with doctors by nature being very cautious and conservative  people.  But we can’t leave the doctors to take all the initiatives.  As  patients we need to be good listeners in our approach to health by  heeding all the great health messages that keep being given to us about  vaccinations, smoking, alcohol, exercise and healthy eating.  We also  need to be good communicators and tell our doctors how we are feeling  with conditions such as pain.  If the team treating you doesn’t have the  best information then it may be that you will not end up getting the  best treatment! 
		This entry was posted on October 4, 2009 at 12:14 pm, and is filed under       
		
Health
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