Article(electronic)January 20, 2018

The Magic Wand: A Case Study of Chronic Neck Pain

In: Qualitative report: an online journal dedicated to qualitative research and critical inquiry

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Abstract

Medications used to manage chronic pain have documented side effects including drug dependency, drug interaction, and adverse systemic reactions. This case study used Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis to understand how one individual experienced chronic neck pain including pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical interventions. Convenience sampling identified Ms. P, an individual with a 10-year history of chronic pain. The research questions were: "How does one individual with chronic neck pain describe their experience living with neck pain?" and "How does one individual with chronic neck pain manage their pain?" Three super-ordinate themes emerged: pain pervades everything, finding relief, and recovery. Findings suggest that living with chronic pain is framed by both the experience of severe pain and the search for a cure. Fear, panic, and despair accompany ongoing pain. Initially, the participant's physician prescribed medications including narcotics, which are described as a slippery slope. In desperation, the participant sought alternative treatments.

Languages

English

Publisher

Nova Southeastern University

ISSN: 1052-0147

DOI

10.46743/2160-3715/2018.2869

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