The Pain Pod

Follow The Pain Pod
Share on
Copy link to clipboard

Are you ready to know what you don’t know about chronic pain? We’re shining a light on the good, the bad, and the very ugly about living with pain in Canada. No hype, no hysteria, just the truth.

Chronic Pain Association of Canada


    • Jul 16, 2024 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 42m AVG DURATION
    • 22 EPISODES


    Search for episodes from The Pain Pod with a specific topic:

    Latest episodes from The Pain Pod

    Pain Warriors

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 28:14


    Invisible. Disbelieved. Shunned. This is the story of their fight.

    Part Two: Sex/Intimacy/Dating and Chronic Pain

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2024 29:02


    So, a sociologist with chronic pain walks into a bar...just kidding! But wait—not really! When it comes to dating with chronic pain, we often get the message to accept what we cannot do. But what if people living with chronic pain already know what they need to experience the love, sex, and partnership they desire? Listen to Mary Jessome explain how it surprisingly all played out...

    Part One: Back Pain with a little Sex

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 37:53


    Did you ever put on some Marvin Gaye for a little hanky-panky and end up screwing your back instead? Listen to Professor Stuart McGill talk about the world's only research he completed with live back-pained couples and Avatar technology to discover how to have sex without triggering back pain!

    How are YOU sleeping?

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2023 65:08


    What science has shown will blow your mind - maybe even enough to have you running for a "sleep coach". YES that's a thing so get in the know! Listen to a sleep expert tell you what you never dreamt you never knew about your own sleep—including how it affects your pain.

    Are you a candidate?

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 21:39


    How much do you know about the role of physiotherapy for chronic pain? What can recovery mean? Nathan Augeard is on a mission. A physical therapist in Quebec, founder of Physio Connection, and PhD candidate at McGill university, he aims to improve how physiotherapy students learn to help manage pain throughout Canadian universities. WATCH or listen to our first audiovisual podcast!

    Follow the science? Not if it's MME.

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2022 45:50


    As you'll hear by all the paper-shuffling Josh does starting a few minutes in, when he's searching for the origins of MME (aka morphine milligram equivalents), he comes up with 'a whole lot of nothing,' just as he says. Really noisy nothing! And those chirping tweety birds you're hearing in the background? Are they those clouds of Looney Tunes 'circling birdies' that twitter above cartoon characters who've been bonked in the head? This stuff IS bonkers, after all.

    By the numbers: exploding bad drug policy

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 50:18


    Dr Nabarun Dasgupta studies drugs and infectious diseases in the Opioid Data Lab at the University of North Carolina's Injury Prevention Research Center. In the last several years, he's published groundbreaking epidemiological analyses that explode the myth that prescribed narcotics are driving the "opioid crisis." Dr Dasgupta says his passion is "to tell true stories about health with numbers" drawn from field research, large database analytics, lab investigations, randomized trials, and community-based interventions. Learn the facts about the causes of drug overdoses from an authentic expert who's passionate about the truth—and compassionate for all of us still devastated by a decade of bad drug policy.

    "Central sensitization": is it real?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 57:52


    Lately we're hearing a lot about so-called "central sensitization" of the nervous system as an explanation for chronic pain. Is it real? Is it an excuse to keep people in pain away from treatments like opioids, or even to blame us for our pain? Today, Dr Andrea Trescot joins us from Jacksonville, Florida, with the 411. As past president of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, past pain fellowship director at the Universities of Florida and Washington, and now CMO of Stimwave, a wireless stimulation company, Dr Trescot takes pain pretty seriously. While she continues to see patients in Florida and Alaska, she never stops speaking and writing about pain treatment. Dr Trescot has written 150+ articles and edited three textbooks about it, and, for patients, has co-authored PainWise: A Patient's Guide to Pain Management.

    When the body attacks itself

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2022 37:53


    Autoimmune disorders are complex, plentiful, often painful, and not well-understood. Maybe you've heard lately that "the body can't attack itself"? Wrong. Our inflammatory mechanisms—our bodies' built-in protections against disease—can go haywire and hurt us, with the disruption manifesting in at least eighty different disorders so far. Today we talk about the inflammatory process and its remedies with the renowned American pain specialist Lynn Webster. Board-certified in anaesthesiology and pain medicine and noted for his advocacy and compassion, Dr Webster has published widely on pain and its best treatments. We discuss interventions like diet and new drug therapies, and where sufferers can turn for help.

    Malign US health policy set to re-enter Canada

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 24:04


    Should Canadians care that the US Centers for Disease Control is revising its 2016 guideline for prescribing opioids for pain? That's the question we put to Barry Ulmer, the long-time head of the Chronic Pain Association of Canada. Listen up! In 2017, we found out the hard way that when it comes to "the war on drugs," what happens in the US doesn't stay in the US. With Canada's patients and doctors in the crosshairs again, the CDC is now taking comments on its final draft. Find out how to make your voice heard.

    CDC guideline: 'Little Shop of Horrors' 2.o

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 59:22


    Noted U.S. patient advocate Richard "Red" Lawhern tells us all that's wrong with the CDC's rewrite of its disastrous 2016 opiate prescribing guideline, just out for comment. According to Red, who's slogged through all 211 pages of what he calls this new "little shop of horrors," the rewrite will hurt even more patients than the original did—and even more doctors, too. Patients' needs, clinicians' expertise, scientific evidence:  these still go unconsidered, as if the prescribing catastrophe of the last five years never happened, never mind the wreckage it's caused on both sides of the border.

    Does gender make you sick?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2022 33:39


    If you identify as female and a patient, you've come up against preferential treatment—where men are preferred over women by clinicians (both male and female) and by the medical system itself. We speak about the age-old and still very current tradition of medical misogyny with the young woman who created The Happy Pelvis, and who's long experienced it herself. She tells us how her health has been harmed by misogyny, what clinicians actually say to their women patients, and how even you can hope for a Happy Pelvis and indeed a healthy body, despite the odds.

    Josh Bloom: debunking the junk "science" of the opioid crackdown

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 52:01


    Dr Josh Bloom, known for his witty and acerbic commentary on what's wrong with and even downright stupid about a lot of "science-based" policy, is the Director of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Science at the American Council on Science and Health in New York. Josh has a PhD in organic chemistry, and no patience at all for the ongoing, supposedly evidence-based crackdown on prescribed opioids. He talks to us about how the facts of pharmaceutical pain relievers are distorted at the get-go by the very words policymakers and the media use to discuss them.

    When pain means poverty

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2021 47:16


    Did you know that the number one predictor of early death is poverty? And that chronic pain has a very high correlation with poverty? If you suffer chronic pain, you're likely to be poor. Simple as that. If your pain starts when you're young, Canada's systems—our not-so-"universal" health care and our so-called social safety net—pretty well ensure that you'll subsist far below the poverty line for the rest of your days. We talk with a man about his pain and the extreme poverty that goes with it.

    Pain in an Outport

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 42:37


    Severe pain. Isolation. Secrets must be kept. No treatment. How do you survive?

    Noted US patient advocate "kicks ass, takes names"

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 59:51


    North Carolina's Richard "Red" Lawhern, PhD has spent years debunking PROPaganda about the supposed dangers of prescribed opiate analgesics. His analyses show that they didn't cause the "opioid crisis," that "overprescribing" is a fiction, that both the US prescribing guideline and its Canadian derivative are shady business beyond repair, and that undertreating pain is deadly.

    Cannabis, diet: do they work for pain?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 26:35


    Dr Mary Lynch has long advocated for treating pain well, whatever it takes — maybe even diet and cannabinoids. She's one of the founders of the Pain Medicine certification program at Canada's Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, is a past president of the Canadian Pain Society, and is Professor of Anesthesia, Psychiatry and Pharmacology at Dalhousie University in Halifax, where she works in the pain clinic at the QEII Health Sciences Centre.

    What we lose when we undertreat pain

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2021 35:10


    Harvard Law graduate Kate Nicholson served 18 years in the DOJ as a health policy and civil rights lawyer and is an expert on the Americans with Disabilities Act. When a surgical mishap immobilized her for 20 years, opiate meds helped her continue. Kate is known for her TEDx talk, What We Lose When We Undertreat Pain, leads the National Pain Advocacy Center (nationalpain.org), and sits on the CDC's Opioid Workgroup.

    Back pain: “what you don't know you don't know”

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 55:02


    Dr Stuart McGill's research investigated issues related to the mechanisms that cause back pain, and how to rehabilitate back-pained people into injury resilience and better performance. His advice is often sought by governments, corporations, legal experts, medical groups, and elite athletes and teams from around the world.

    York U Researcher: How Ontario's Medical Regulator Devastates People with Pain

    Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2021 36:54


    To complete her PhD in Sociology at Toronto's York University, Leigha has spent three years looking into the effects of Ontario's medical regulator and doctor watcher, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, to see how its policies on opiate prescribing for pain have changed—and why. Is the College helping Ontario's doctors alleviate suffering, or is something else going on? What she found is horrifying.

    Inside the System: a Chronic Pain Doctor Speaks

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 32:39


    Join us as we chat with a semi-retired pain physician and find out what, if anything, has changed in pain management over the last 30 years.

    Social Murder

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 45:13


    A discussion of how Friedrich Engels phenomenon of "social murder" is applicable today in health care and pain policy.

    Claim The Pain Pod

    In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

    Claim Cancel