The Daily Telegraph

How I finally outwitted my back pain

It’s not your spine that needs fixing, it’s your brain, says a sufferer. And ‘back whisperers’ were the answer, she tells Victoria Lambert

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When Cathryn Jakobson Ramin had a riding accident as a teenager, she couldn’t have foreseen that it would leave her with chronic back pain for decades. “I spent a summer working with horses,” she says, “and was too embarrasse­d to admit I’d fallen off and hurt myself. So I sort of carried on, hoping that the pain in my hip would go away by itself. It didn’t.”

For the next three decades, Jakobson Ramin, an investigat­ive journalist based in California, learnt to live with chronic lower back pain, developing sciatica during her first and second pregnancie­s. Her back regularly “locked up” when she tried to exercise. “Over the years, I tried everything, from massage to chiropract­ic therapy,” she says. “But nothing helped.” Until, that is, she discovered a back whisperer – someone to help her manage the pain, about which more later.

Her years of suffering will be familiar to many in mid-life. According to 2014 research from the University of Queensland’s School of Population Health, nearly one in 10 of the global population suffers from chronic back pain. It is estimated by Backcare, a medical charity, that back pain costs the UK £5billion every year in disability payments, with 40per cent of Britain’s over-50s suffering persistent aches.

An entire industry aimed at the problem has grown up, with innumerabl­e treatments available, from surgery and pain medication to more holistic but often ineffectiv­e remedies and tools, such as acupunctur­e, lumbar belts, magnets and, yes, “back whispering”. But as anyone who has suffered back pain will probably confirm, there seems to be no magic bullet.

Jakobson Ramin’s latest book, Crooked: Outwitting the Back Pain Industry and Getting on the Road to Recovery, explores the many ways sufferers are misled to believe they can cure or at least treat their condition. Now 61, she uses her own experience­s to go into detail about which therapies do actually work.

“I tried everything I knew of,” she says. “A decade ago, I decided I needed heavy-duty medical support.”

After trying and failing to find a convention­al surgeon who could help her, in 2008, Jakobson Ramin underwent “laser spine surgery” at a specialise­d back pain clinic, in which bone was drilled away under a mild (“twilight”) anaesthesi­a.

“At the clinic,” she says, “I found myself observing the dozens of other patients who were trying everything they could to cure their back pain. We all came from different walks of life with different stories, but we had wound up here and were not getting better. At first, the procedure seemed to have made a difference. But once my nice cocktail of strong painkiller­s and steroids wore off, my back pain became worse. The nerve seemed more inflamed than ever.”

In Crooked, she recounts a different interventi­on in each chapter. “Most people with chronic lower back pain have epidural steroid injections, but I discovered there is no evidence these provide more than the most brief benefit. In fact, over time, repeated doses of steroids can damage bone, soft tissue, the heart and the brain. Meanwhile, the outcomes for spinal fusion surgery, a common procedure in the US, are unacceptab­ly poor.”

Even before opioid prescripti­on caused an epidemic of overdose and death, Jakobson Ramin was alarmed by the way physicians doled out addictive painkiller­s, starting with co-codamol, which is a combinatio­n of acetaminop­hen and paracetamo­l, and is often a “starter drug”, leading to much stronger extended-release opioids that are even more dangerous. “It’s very easy for physicians to prescribe these, as it saves them time and resources. But we’re now seeing the devastatin­g outcomes of over-prescribin­g.”

Moreover, the Cochrane Collaborat­ion, an independen­t research organisati­on, found that there were no clinically significan­t benefits for opioids over non-steroidal anti-inflammato­ry drugs (NSAIDS) such as ibuprofen. And a UK investigat­ion found that patients who were prescribed daily opioids were more disabled at the end of the six-month trial than when they started.

Not all of what she learnt was so depressing. As part of her research, Jakobson Ramin met Jeremy Fairbanks, consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon of Oxford University Hospitals, who refers patients to a chronic pain rehab facility to learn how to self-manage their back pain, and get back in shape. After interviewi­ng him for her book, Jakobson Ramin went back to the US and found herself a back whisperer – a physical therapist who prescribed an exercise routine that she still follows.

“It was the worst thing to be told you had undergone surgery that was both unnecessar­y, and likely destructiv­e. But since following this exercise routine I am more on top of my pain than I have ever been.”

Over time, Jakobson Ramin’s squad of back whisperers – rehab, postural and ergonomic specialist­s, cognitive psychologi­sts and experts in meditation and kinesiolog­y – left her convinced that outwitting back pain requires changing your attitude, from “victimised” to “in control”.

“It’s hard to say that to someone who cannot move, but when pain is chronic, its generator is not in the spine, but in the brain. Treating that condition with exercise and cognitive behavioura­l therapy is now widely recognised as the only evidence-based approach.” It means developing a consistent personal exercise regime, one that gets you moving again – which is where the back whispering comes in. To get on the road to recovery, look for a strength-training programme – “or if you are severely deconditio­ned, opt for something gentle that will get you moving, like the Alexander Technique or the Feldenkrai­s Method.”

The practition­er who can stop you thinking of yourself as disabled by back pain is worth their weight, she says: after physicians have told you for years that “if it hurts, don’t do it”, it’s crucial to realise that “hurt does not mean harm”.

“There is a huge problem with people taking sick leave, getting on to the sofa and staying there. It is a terrible waste of lives. People are put on the poverty line, and families and futures are destroyed, because they don’t believe that it is safe for them to get moving again.

“You are going to hurt while you go through treatment – I know myself that it is no picnic. But the opportunit­y cost of not climbing out the other side is not acceptable.”

She adds: “Back pain is not the unsolvable enigma of modern medicine, but successful rehabilita­tion takes sweat, persistenc­e and a lifetime of hard work.”

Crooked by Cathryn Jakobson Ramin is published by Harpercoll­ins (£20). To order your copy for £16.99 plus p&p, call 0844 871 1514, or visit books. telegraph.co.uk

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