Physical activity and exercise for chronic pain in adults: an overview of Cochrane Reviews
University of Dundee · University of Oxford · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Chronic pain is defined as pain lasting beyond normal tissue healing time, generally taken to be 12 weeks. It contributes to disability, anxiety, depression, sleep disturbances, poor quality of life, and healthcare costs. Chronic pain has a weighted mean prevalence in adults of 20%.For many years, the treatment choice for chronic pain included recommendations for rest and inactivity. However, exercise may have specific benefits in reducing the severity of chronic pain, as well as more general benefits associated with improved overall physical and mental health, and physical functioning.Physical activity and exercise programmes are increasingly being promoted and offered in various healthcare systems, and for a variety of chronic pain conditions. It is therefore important at this stage to establish the efficacy and safety of these programmes, and furthermore to address the critical factors that determine their success or failure.
To provide an overview of Cochrane Reviews of adults with chronic pain to determine (1) the effectiveness of different physical activity and exercise interventions in reducing pain severity and its impact on function, quality of life, and healthcare use; and (2) the evidence for any adverse effects or harm associated with physical activity and exercise interventions.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- —
- Percentile
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- References
- 139
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Systematic review
- Medicine
- Chronic pain
- Physical therapy
- Psychological intervention
- Anxiety
- Cochrane Library
- Quality of life (healthcare)
- No poverty