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Industrial Relations - 2008

2008 | 2006

Coping with chronic pain

16/06/2008
One in five Australians of working age suffers from on-going pain. If you're over 65, the figure jumps to one in two. A recent Access Economics report commissioned by MBF says the annual cost of chronic pain is more than $34 billion. If you want the breakdown, that includes a $7 billion drain on the health system and productivity losses of $11.7 billion—much of that in workers compensation claims. Chronic pain is generally defined as pain experienced every day for three months or more. It usually follows an acute phase and the causes are varied, including arthritis, cancer, surgical complications, and injuries, particularly lower back. While all the research recommends a holistic approach to dealing with pain, is our health system geared to that? Can reliance on drugs lead to poorer outcomes? Without real treatment or cure, what are some of the best strategies for coping with and living with pain?