Back pain

Selling the solution: What Patients Think We Do vs. What We Actually Do

Persistent pain care often begins with mismatched expectations — patients may arrive seeking a quick fix, while clinicians know the path forward is more complex. In this article, we explore how doctors and allied health professionals can bridge that gap with empathy, education, and clear communication to build trust, reframe goals, and guide patients toward better outcomes.

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When Chronic Pain is More Than Musculoskeletal

Chronic pain is one of the most common reasons for GP visits in Australia. Often, it’s musculoskeletal in origin — back pain, joint pain, soft tissue strain. But what happens when the scan is clear, the physio hasn’t helped, and the medications don’t make a difference?
At Axxon Pain Medicine, we frequently assess patients who’ve spent months — or years — in this cycle. The issue? Their pain isn’t purely musculoskeletal.

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AI in Pain Assessment: A New Lens on Chronic Pain

Pain is deeply personal — and often hard to communicate. Emerging AI technologies are changing that, offering more objective ways to assess pain through facial expressions, physiological data, and real-time tracking. In this article, we explore how AI is helping bridge the communication gap, especially for non-verbal or vulnerable patients, and what this means for the future of personalised, data-driven pain care.

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Central Sensitisation: Understanding and Recognising a Common Clinical Pattern

Pain that doesn’t follow expected anatomical patterns, pain that spreads beyond the original site, or pain that feels “out of proportion” are familiar and often challenging presentations in general practice. One useful framework for understanding these symptoms is central sensitisation.

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Working with Allied Health: A Collaborative Approach to Coordinated Pain Care

Pain is one of the most common — and often most complex — presentations seen in general practice. While the instinct to provide rapid solutions is completely understandable, persistent or chronic pain usually benefits from a coordinated, team-based approach that extends beyond imaging, procedures, or medication adjustments.

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Virtual Reality in Pain Management: A Glimpse Into the Future of Non-Drug Pain Relief

It’s a question often left unsaid in the consultation room, but heavily implied: “Is this pain even real?”
Functional pain — pain without identifiable tissue damage or structural pathology — continues to challenge clinicians and frustrate patients. It sits in that uncomfortable space between physical and psychological, where test results offer no answers, yet the patient’s suffering is very real.

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Is This Pain Real? Talking About Functional Pain with Compassion

It’s a question often left unsaid in the consultation room, but heavily implied: “Is this pain even real?”
Functional pain — pain without identifiable tissue damage or structural pathology — continues to challenge clinicians and frustrate patients. It sits in that uncomfortable space between physical and psychological, where test results offer no answers, yet the patient’s suffering is very real.

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Not Getting Better After 3 Months? When Pain Stops Being ‘Acute’

Most patients—and many clinicians—expect acute pain to resolve within a matter of weeks. But what happens when it doesn’t? When a patient continues to report pain three months or more after an injury, surgery, or onset of symptoms, it’s time to change the clinical lens. Pain that lingers past the 12-week mark is no longer considered “acute”—it has transitioned into the chronic or persistent pain category and requires a different management approach.

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How to Communicate With Patients Who’ve ‘Tried Everything’

When patients feel they’ve exhausted every option, it can signal more than treatment fatigue — it often reflects frustration, fear, and loss of trust. In this article, we explore practical strategies for GPs and allied health professionals to validate these experiences, gently reframe the pain narrative, and co-create hopeful, function-focused care plans that break through the “nothing works” barrier.

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