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Solution Focused Brief Therapy for Chronic Pain Management: A Different Way to Live Well With Pain

Solution Focused Brief Therapy For Chronic Pain Management strengthens self-efficacy, autonomy, and goal-directed action rather than focusing solely on pain reduction. Research published in the British Journal of Pain shows that this strengths-based approach improves quality of life and supports holistic and palliative care contexts.

Chronic pain is exhausting. It affects your body, your sleep, your mood, your relationships, and often your sense of who you are. Over time, many people begin to feel stuck — trying treatment after treatment, hoping something will “fix” the pain.

But what if the goal shifts from eliminating pain to living better despite it?

This is where Solution Focused Brief Therapy For Chronic Pain Management offers a powerful and evidence-informed contribution.


Chronic Pain Is More Than a Physical Problem

Research consistently shows that chronic pain affects not only the body but also emotional, social, and even spiritual aspects of life. Modern pain services increasingly follow a biopsychosocial model — meaning they address thoughts, behaviour, relationships, and coping, not just physical symptoms.

This holistic understanding is also central in palliative care, where chronic pain may accompany serious or life-limiting illness. In such contexts, quality of life, meaning, and daily functioning become just as important as symptom control.


Solution Focused Brief Therapy For Chronic Pain Management

Solution focused brief therapy is a practical, goal-oriented counselling approach that asks:

  • What is already helping, even slightly?

  • What would your “preferred future” look like?

  • What small step would move you one point forward?

When applied to chronic pain, the focus shifts from analysing the cause of pain to strengthening your ability to live well alongside it. Solution Focused Brief Therapy For Chronic Pain Management does not deny pain. Instead, it builds:

  • Confidence

  • Personal agency

  • Emotional resilience

  • Realistic forward movement

It helps you identify what is within your control — and act on it.


What Does the Research Say?

A 2014 qualitative study published in the British Journal of Pain explored the experiences of people who completed an 8-week solution-focused pain management programme (Dargan, Simm, & Murray, 2014).

Participants described several meaningful changes:


1. Increased Confidence and Self-Belief

Many reported feeling more capable of managing their lives despite pain. Rather than waiting passively for relief, they felt empowered to take action.

2. Greater Sense of Control

Even when pain remained, participants felt clearer about what was within their control and what was not — reducing helplessness.

3. Valuing Their Own Expertise

People living with chronic pain were encouraged to recognise themselves as experts in their own experience. Being invited to share strategies and insights increased feelings of purpose and connection.

4. Focus on the Future

Participants described the programme as helping them move toward a preferred future — one defined by meaningful activity and improved functioning.

Importantly, improvement was not necessarily about reducing pain intensity. Instead, it was about increasing self-efficacy — the belief that “I can cope” — which is strongly linked to improved functioning in chronic pain management.


Why This Matters in Chronic Pain Management and Palliative Care

When people live with long-term pain, they often enter cycles of:

  • Searching endlessly for a cure

  • Feeling dismissed or invalidated

  • Losing confidence in their own capacity


A solution-focused approach strengthens psychological resources that influence how pain is experienced and managed. This is particularly relevant in palliative care contexts, where chronic pain may be ongoing and the focus shifts toward dignity, autonomy, and quality of life.

Rather than replacing medical care, solution focused brief therapy complements it. It supports:

  • Self-determination

  • Independence

  • Stronger coping skills

  • Improved emotional wellbeing

  • A renewed sense of meaning


Living with chronic pain is an active process. While pain may not always be fully controllable, your response to it — and your ability to move toward what matters — often can be strengthened.


If you want to explore how Solution Focused Brief Therapy can help you with chronic pain management, you can schedule a FREE 15min initial meeting to discuss it, HERE.


Reference

Dargan, P. J., Simm, R., & Murray, C. (2014). New approaches towards chronic pain: Patient experiences of a solution-focused pain management programme. British Journal of Pain, 8(1), 34–42. https://doi.org/10.1177/2049463713516755

 
 
 

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