hehehehehe......When Julie Price threw out her back for the second time in December, she knew she needed help.
“It was immobilizing and intense,” Price, a 37-year-old New York City-based accountant, told The Huffington Post.
Price, a former athlete,
felt she had lost a lot of strength after two pregnancies. She also has
flat feet, alignment issues and “bad knees,” so she realized she
couldn’t take care of everything alone.
Although the pain started to
lessen on its own, Price went to see Allen Chen, director of physiatry
at NewYork-Presbyterian/The Spine Hospital, who specializes in treating
spine injuries.
Chen, after ruling out
structural problems with her spine, prescribed physical therapy once a
week and home exercises. She doesn’t have any pain now, and she feels
stronger, not just in her back but also in her core and legs, she said.
“Last week I was able to
squat without anything hurting, which I never thought would happen,” she
said. The physical therapy “has made a world of difference.”
The American College of
Physicians, in new guidelines released this week, says a lot more
patients should receive the type of treatment Chen prescribed for Price.
Doctors need to educate
their patients that lower back pain is like a common cold ― unpleasant
but hard to treat and likely to go away on its own. And chances are
painkillers won’t do much to help.
“Low back pain is very
common, and most [of it] improves over time regardless of treatment,”
Nitin Damle, president of the American College of Physicians and a
practicing internist, told HuffPost.
That’s a significant task considering that estimates suggest up to a fourth of all adults in the U.S. have had some back pain for at least one day in the past three months. It’s one of the most common reasons Americans go to a doctor.
The new guidelines: Don’t even bother with Tylenol
The new ACP guidelines
recommend non-drug treatments, such as massage, yoga, tai chi and
acupuncture, as the first line of defense against back pain.
Only if those are not effective, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(or NSAIDs, like aspirin and ibuprofen) should be used. Then, if those
are ineffective, prescription drugs can be tried.
Another significant change
to the guidelines is that acetaminophens (such as Tylenol and the
combination drugs Excedrin and Sudafed) should not be used at all for
back pain, since recent evidence shows that those over-the-counter
painkillers do not actually help back pain.
The guidelines also
recommend that doctors prescribe opioids only as a last resort, after
other drug and non-drug therapies did not work, and after the doctor has
explained the risks and benefits to the patient.
Overuse of over-the-counter painkillers, common among people with lower back pain, can lead to health risks,
including heart and gastrointestinal problems. And the serious risks
associated with opioid misuse ― including addiction, overdose and death ―
have led the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to issue its
own guidelines for reducing prescription opioid use across all medical disciplines.
A big benefit of the new
guidelines is that they will help patients avoid the risks associated
with NSAIDs, Tylenol and, most significantly, opioids, Chen said. Many
of the recommended non-drug therapies included in the guidelines ― yoga,
tai chi, massage, heat and acupuncture therapy, among others ― are very
low risk, he added.
It’s also important to note that the guidelines apply only to low back pain that stays in the back (not the kind that radiates down the leg or to other areas).
Massage, yoga, acupuncture first
“There’s been a push over
the past few years in my practice and in many others to push away from
medications ― particularly opioids,” Chen told HuffPost in a phone
interview.
Previous treatment guidelines for low back pain
from 2007 had recommended NSAIDs be used along with a non-drug
treatment. “But I think the focus on non-pharmacological treatments for
low back pain, opposed to medications ― particularly opioids ― is long
overdue,” Chen said.
(ACP considers any guidelines out of date after five years and subsequently subject to review.)
Accessible alternative therapy is more important than ever
The guidelines themselves do
not make recommendations for what treatments insurance companies should
cover ― and just because the guidelines recommend a certain treatment
does not mean your policy will cover it.
“Those may end up being out-of-pocket costs,” Chen said.
Plus, not all of the
treatments in the guidelines are even available to all patients
depending on where they live. For example, estimates suggest that in the
U.S. there will be shortages of physical therapists in as many as 48 states by 2030 (based on current trends in needs for physical therapy and projected numbers of therapists).
For Price, getting to
physical therapy once a week is accessible and is covered by her
employer’s health insurance. But there are limits on how many sessions
the plan will cover, she said.
“It does factor into my thoughts of how long do I need to continue” the therapy, she said.
But she’s more than happy
that she’s pain-free without drugs. She did take a few doses of Aleve or
Advil when her pain first started, but in general she tries to avoid
medication, she said.
“The goal now is to get [my back] strong ― and better aligned ― so I don’t throw it out again.”
“I knew losing the strength I
used to have before kids was most likely the biggest issue ― and that
learning how to get that done right and fit it back into my new mommy
lifestyle would be what I really needed,” Price said.
Source....Huffington Post
Source....Huffington Post
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