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Improving pain through physical activity

16th February 2021


Written by Chris Davis, Senior Project Officer at Active Gloucestershire. 

Physical activity and supervised exercise are the interventions most likely to help a person with persistent pain in relation to outcomes that are important to them. Working collaboratively with Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group, Active Gloucestershire has been developing a new initiative called ‘It’s your move’, offering a physical activity programme for people living with persistent pain.

It’s safe to say that the coronavirus pandemic has demanded a radical adjustment to the way that services are delivered. ‘It’s your move’ has piloted a virtual offer to enable the delivery of this community-based initiative, that brings exercise and physical activity to the forefront of self-management approaches.

‘It’s your move’ aims to introduce patients to the benefits of physical activity, and support health care professionals in a way that changes the conversation, challenges anxieties in a positive way, and considers what is most important to the individual e.g. social connections, independence, managing mental health, and improving daily function.

We have built relationships with a number of GP practices that have recommended patients for a ten-session, supervised activity programme that is accessed virtually from their own homes. Despite the obvious need for virtual approaches arising from Covid-19, it has proven to be a useful offer for those who may not relate to the idea of taking part in activity in a hospital or traditional leisure type setting.

Participants from the first of three activity pilots have reported enjoyable experiences, and benefits related to quality of life and physical improvement, not limited to just pain.

But something that has stood out above all, is the evidence of meaningful social connection that participants are keen to maintain beyond their participation in the pilot. Sharing experiences, building relationships and improving quality of life, are just small parts of a complex picture, but for which exercise serves a clear, sustainable benefit.

The ambition for the project is to scale-up the provision to allow a broader range of health care professionals to recommend people for the programme, whilst becoming change makers and strong advocates for physical activity as a gold standard approach to self-management.

If you are a health care professional working with people with persistent pain, we’d love to hear from you to share learning from the programme and explore how this type of initiative may benefit your patients. Please contact Chris, Senior Project Officer at Active Gloucestershire, for more information.

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