Chronic Back Pain Specialist Bennington VT

Basically we broke new ground in investigating a method that a lot of people have been using for thousands of years to see if it works for an average person with chronic back pain.

Karen Nepveu
(802) 654-3993
245 S Park Dr Ste 5
Colchester, VT
Sheldon Mark Cooper, MD
802-656-4574
U Vt Coll Medicine B,
Burlington, VT
Bonita Sandra Libman, MD
802-847-4574
1 S Prospect St Fl 5
Burlington, VT
Bonita Sandra Libman
(802) 847-4574
111 Colchester Ave
Burlington, VT
Edward Samuel Leib
(802) 847-4574
111 Colchester Ave
Burlington, VT
Martha Agnes Davitt, MD
802-658-4714
61 Fire Pond Rd
Charlotte, VT
Edward Saml Leib, MD
802-656-4574
1 S Prospect St
Burlington, VT
Leslie S Abramson
(802) 847-8200
111 Colchester Ave
Burlington, VT
Dr.David Patek
603-924-7191
21 Belmont Avenue
Brattleboro, VT
Dean Hugh Stephens
(802) 847-1000
111 Colchester Ave
Burlington, VT
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Chronic Back Pain

Pain and anger seem to go hand in hand. Clinical research has shown that chronic low-back pain sufferers tend to have high levels of anger and that anger exacerbates the experience of pain. Now an innovative pilot study shows that loving-kindness meditation—a Buddhist technique for fostering love and transforming anger into compassion—can help reverse the cycle.

“Basically we broke new ground in investigating a method that a lot of people have been using for thousands of years to see if it works for an average person with chronic back pain,” says Jim Carson, PhD, of the Duke University Medical Center and the study’s lead author.

The study tested an eight-week loving-kindness program for chronic low-back pain patients, who were randomly assigned to conventional care or the meditation intervention. The patients who used loving-kindness techniques showed significant improvements in their pain and psychological distress levels that correlated to the time spent practicing the meditation on any given day.

“I was somewhat surprised by how people, once they started using the methods, reported changes in their life and relationships,” Carson says. Who knows, showing a little bit of kindness and compassion may be the ultimate form of pain relief.

Elizabeth Marglin

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