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Pain management in primary care – current perspectives


H P Meyer

Abstract



According to a 1998 World Health Organization Survey of 26 000 primary care patients on five continents, 22% reported persistent
pain over the past year. Part of the problem lies with some health-care providers who have failed to keep up with the advances
in pain medicine and continue to follow the biomedical approach, which regards a specific pathway as the only source
of pain. In this model, all pain is regarded as a warning signal of tissue injury, and if conservative treatment fails, some surgical
technique will be able to correct the problem.
The modern paradigm of pain management has moved from this biomedical to the broader biopsychosocial approach,
where pain mechanisms now integrate input from sensory, emotional and cognitive systems.

South African Family Practice Vol. 49 (7) 2007: pp. 20-25

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2078-6204
print ISSN: 2078-6190