Learn invaluable techniques for working with people who live with persistent pain
Live Well with Pain has developed a rich collection of self-management tools and techniques for use by clinicians and other practitioners working with people with pain.
These tried and tested techniques, developed and practised by health care professionals, will help you shift the conversation towards self-care and guide the person you are supporting, to become a confident self-manager of their pain.
Using any of our tools and resources with your patients or clients is completely free. You can find out more about the terms of use for practitioners here.
Practitioners: get printed guides to offer the people you’re supporting
Encourage active engagement in self-care, with LWWP’s range of simple and attractive self-management booklets.
Our resources for practitioners have been produced for clinicians, social prescribers, pharmacists, clinical psychologists, physiotherapists – or indeed any practitioners working in pain management.
They include training videos, document downloads and guidance. Here are just some of the topics covered:
Shifting the conversation
Why we need to listen to a person’s ‘pain story’
Moving from medicines-based treatment to a self management approach
Supporting someone to form person-centred goals
Medicines and your patient
Exploring medicines use with a patient
Carrying out a medicines review
Opioid prescribing – how does your practice measure up?
Supporting self-management
The skills needed to develop a person’s pacing skills
Why using metaphors to explain pain is so effective
Why self-management with confidence is the aim
All our resources for practitioners are completely free to use in your work with people living with pain.
The role of any analgesic medicine in pain management is to reduce pain intensity and allow improved or maintained function. In other words, they are used to help the patient do more of the things that matter to them.
If medicines are not allowing a person to do more, whether because they do not reduce pain intensity or due to side-effects, then they should be carefully reduced and stopped at a time and pace the person can manage.
We have developed a range of resources and research for clinicians, including:
opioid equivalence, risks and recommendations
an Opioid Tapering Resource Pack
and key research papers by leading pain medicine specialists
Live Well with Pain has developed wide range of leaflets and information sheets to download and print, for you to offer to the person you’re working with. These cover topics such as:
Self-management information leaflets
Explaining pain
Pain and the brain
Goal setting
Pacing
Learning to manage setbacks
Understanding the pain cycle
How to sleep well with pain
Self-management tools
My SMART Goals
My Goal Ladder
My Activity Diary
My Daily Pacing Plan
Medicines information for people with pain
Taking opioids for pain
Driving and Pain
The Great Opioid Side Effect Lottery
Information posters for public waiting areas
Painkillers – the downside
An opioid thermometer
All our resources are completely free to download and use in your work with people living with pain.
Live Well with Pain’s resources offer tried, tested, and effective ways to develop your confidence to self manage your pain.
And everything is completely free to use, whether you are a person living with persistent pain, a carer, or a health care professional supporting people to develop their self management skills.