A Digital Lifeline for Chronic Pain: How a Scalable Program Reduces Long-Term Suffering
A new randomized controlled trial published in Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine demonstrates the long-term benefits of a scalable, digital behavioral intervention for patients with chronic spinal pain and widespread fibromyalgia symptoms. The study compared a medical assistant-coached program combining cognitive-behavioral therapy with resilience-enhancing activities (PRISM-CBT) against standard CBT and usual care. While the primary outcome at 8 weeks showed no significant difference, the PRISM-CBT intervention yielded substantial and clinically meaningful improvements over the following year. Notably, it led to a 7.4-point greater reduction in global symptom burden compared to usual care at 12 months and consistently outperformed both comparators in reducing pain interference and severity, key metrics in critical care and pain management for complex, multi-symptom patients.
Study Significance: For critical care and pain specialists managing patients with complex, refractory conditions, this research highlights a scalable model for improving long-term outcomes. The findings suggest that integrating resilience-building components into digitally delivered, coach-supported programs can significantly reduce pain interference—a major determinant of patient function and quality of life. This approach offers a practical strategy for health systems aiming to enhance post-ICU recovery and manage chronic pain with limited specialist resources.
Source →Stay curious. Stay informed — with Science Briefing.
Always double check the original article for accuracy.
