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sleepyangel30
02-15-2005, 11:20 AM
Got this in my email from WebMD

Older People Cope Better With Long-Term Pain

By Daniel DeNoon
WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD
on Friday, January 28, 2005


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Jan. 28, 2005 -- Chronic pain hurts worse when you're young, a U.S. study shows.

"Older people may feel that pain is just something that you deal with, perhaps because they were raised in a time when pain was not addressed in the way we deal with it today, or because they feel that pain is just a normal part of getting older," Carmen R. Green, MD says in a news release.

Green, a pain specialist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues analyzed medical records from nearly 6,000 U.S. adults being treated for long-lasting pain.

Chronic pain patients aged 50 and older, they found, did a better job of coping with their pain than did patients under age 50.

Race had little to do with it. Younger people, whether white or black, reported more depression, more intense pain, and less successful coping than older patients did. Young white patients also had more posttraumatic stress disorderposttraumatic stress disorder symptoms than older white patients did.

"Younger people, who may be dealing with job and family stress in addition to their pain, may experience more negative effects," Green says. "They may also have different expectations about pain treatment and about experiencing chronic pain at a relatively young age."

Green and colleagues suggest that as people get older, they develop more effective coping skills that let them adjust to pain. Older people may simply have acclimated to higher pain thresholds, they suggest. They may also have lower expectations regarding their physical abilities.

The findings appear in a special issue of Pain Medicine.

ICNJess
02-15-2005, 11:25 AM
Angela,

Interesting article. I'm 22, and I find it very hard to deal with all these pain syndromes. It's certainly devastating to life. I know IC and the connected diseases are hard at any age, though :(

Hugs,
Jess

Annie2
02-15-2005, 03:27 PM
I have some serious doubts about the validity of this. I can't help but wonder if older pain patients don't question doctors as much as younger ones because that was the way they were raised (never, ever question what a doctor says was the attitude long ago). I wonder if younger pain patients question doctors more and insist on better treatment for pain while older patients are not as assertive.

desolationangel
02-15-2005, 03:30 PM
I believe it. I mean, my mom has chronic pain from a number of sources, but I think she handles it better than I do because she got it later in life... in other words, she got to experience her youth.

ICNJess
02-16-2005, 03:33 AM
I think chronic pain is hard at any age. I agree with Annie and DesolationAngel. Older folks are more likely to not question their doctors in some cases, but in the same respect, for the longest time I didn't question mine. My mom pushed me to really get the answers.

I think for me, what makes it the most devastating, is the impact it has had on my life. I can cope with the pain, that is not so much a problem. The fact that I had to give up college, my friends, and a bunch of other stuff is what is most devastating.

My belief is that IC impacts every aspect of life, no matter what age.