Chronic Pain Support Groups in New Hampshire

Building Resilience, Telehealth
A six session group focused on teaching the fundamentals of relaxation, mindfulness, and stress reduction. Methods for inducing the "relaxation response" are taught through explanation, visual images, and guided relaxation practice. This group covers topics including relaxation breathwork, progressive muscle ...
Photo of David Ball, Counselor in New Hampshire
Hosted by David Ball
Counselor, MA, LCMHC
Verified Verified
Group meets in Concord, NH 03301
A six session group focused on teaching the fundamentals of relaxation, mindfulness, and stress reduction. Methods for inducing the "relaxation response" are taught through explanation, visual images, and guided relaxation practice. This group covers topics including relaxation breathwork, progressive muscle ...
(603) 932-5910 View (603) 932-5910
Reclaiming Your Life: Women and Chronic Pain
Reclaiming Your Life is now in it's ninth year. This is an ongoing psycho educational support group. This a warm, deeply compassionate group for women who deal with chronic pain and/or chronic illness. We tackle the tough issues and focus ...
Photo of Adele G Michaelides Thomas, Counselor in New Hampshire
Hosted by Adele G Michaelides Thomas
Counselor, MA, LCMHC
Verified Verified
Group meets in Keene, NH 03431
Reclaiming Your Life is now in it's ninth year. This is an ongoing psycho educational support group. This a warm, deeply compassionate group for women who deal with chronic pain and/or chronic illness. We tackle the tough issues and focus ...
(603) 636-7076 View (603) 636-7076
Group Oasis for Pain, Depression and Anxiety
Group Oasis is its 7th year, my second ongoing group for those who live with chronic pain/chronic illness with co-existing conditions of depression and anxiety. This is a confidential psycho educational support group for both both men and women. Together, ...
Photo of Adele G Michaelides Thomas, Counselor in New Hampshire
Hosted by Adele G Michaelides Thomas
Counselor, MA, LCMHC
Verified Verified
Group meets in Keene, NH 03431
Group Oasis is its 7th year, my second ongoing group for those who live with chronic pain/chronic illness with co-existing conditions of depression and anxiety. This is a confidential psycho educational support group for both both men and women. Together, ...
(603) 636-7076 View (603) 636-7076

See more therapy options for New Hampshire

Chronic Pain Support Groups

How does chronic pain therapy work?

Engaging with a psychotherapist to help treat chronic pain does not mean that one’s pain is all in their head. Therapy for chronic-pain patients has been shown to benefit both the mind and the body, targeting physical symptoms and increasing daily functioning. In other words, for many, addressing their emotional health through therapy affects their physical health. A therapist can help a client challenge unhelpful thoughts about pain and develop new ways to respond to it, such as distraction or calming breathing techniques. Studies have found that therapy can be as effective as surgery for certain cases of chronic pain and many doctors recommend trying psychotherapy in advance of considering invasive surgery.

What are the most effective treatment options for chronic pain?

Stress, anxiety, depression, catastrophizing, ruminating, lack of activity, and social withdrawal all make chronic pain worse. Addressing these issues, research shows, can help people gain control over their pain symptoms. Therapeutic approaches such as cognitive behavioral therapy, biofeedback, and mindfulness-based stress reduction, along with greater pain-management education, have been found to help people reduce fear and disability.

Are there new treatments for chronic pain?

Many cases of chronic pain, particularly those involving back pain, remain medically unexplained. But there is evidence that changes in the brain or nervous system are caused by previous physical ailments such as tissue damage; in such cases, the brain may continue to send out pain signals despite the physical cause having healed. To aid patients under these circumstances, a recently developed treatment known as pain reprocessing therapy (PRT) is designed to help the brain “unlearn” this response. A PRT practitioner helps individuals to reduce the “threat value” of their ongoing pain signals until they can reappraise them as less threatening and fear-inducing. They also help an individual to develop new emotional regulation skills.

How long does therapy for chronic pain take?

There is no set timeline for recovery from chronic pain, especially as there may be a range of physical and psychological causes for any individual’s discomfort, but most patients should expect to see a therapist for a number of weeks or months, typically spanning at least 12 sessions. Studies of pain reprocessing therapy found that many individuals’ experience of pain lessened in eight sessions over four weeks.