| name | managing-pain-rehabilitation |
| language | en |
| description | Structures chronic pain rehabilitation with functional restoration and multidisciplinary coordination. Use when managing pain rehab, implementing functional restoration, or coordinating pain programs. |
| tags | ["management","rehabilitation-medicine"] |
| metadata | {"author":"casemark","practice_areas":["Physical Therapy","Occupational Therapy","Rehabilitation Medicine"],"document_types":["Management Report"],"skill_modes":["Management","Coordination"]} |
Managing Pain Rehabilitation
Structures chronic pain rehabilitation using the biopsychosocial model with functional restoration programming, graded activity exposure, pain neuroscience education, and multidisciplinary coordination. Documents outcomes using validated pain and function measures including NPRS, ODI, NDI, Pain Catastrophizing Scale, and Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire.
Why This Skill Exists
Chronic pain affects over 50 million U.S. adults and is the primary driver of opioid prescribing, long-term disability claims, and workers compensation costs. Functional restoration programs demonstrate 65-85% return-to-work rates for chronic pain patients, compared to <25% with passive treatment. However, pain rehabilitation requires fundamentally different documentation than acute injury rehab: the goal is not tissue healing but restoration of function despite pain. Payers deny pain rehab claims when documentation focuses on pain reduction rather than functional improvement, or when the multidisciplinary approach is not coordinated and documented. This skill produces documentation that demonstrates the skilled, coordinated, outcome-driven approach required for program credibility and reimbursement.
Checkpoint A โ Intake Verification
Before initiating chronic pain rehabilitation, confirm:
Required clinical questions:
- What is the pain diagnosis, duration, and prior treatment history (surgeries, injections, medications, prior therapy)?
- What is the current opioid regimen (medication, dose, prescriber) and taper status?
- Has the patient completed psychological screening (depression, anxiety, PTSD, substance abuse)?
- What are the functional limitations specifically (work capacity, ADL deficits, community participation)?
- What are the patient's goals (return to work, pain reduction, functional independence)?
- Is this a workers compensation, personal injury, or general medical case?
Required documents:
- Pain specialist or physiatrist referral
- Complete imaging and diagnostic workup results
- Prior surgical and injection history
- Current medication list with opioid details (morphine milligram equivalents โ MME)
- Psychological evaluation or screening results
- Functional Capacity Evaluation if previously completed
- Workers compensation claim documentation if applicable
Step 1 โ Perform Comprehensive Pain and Function Assessment
Pain assessment instruments:
- NPRS (Numeric Pain Rating Scale): 0-10; document current, best, worst, and average over past week
- Pain diagram: Body map with patient-marked pain locations, type (aching, burning, sharp, numbness)
- Brief Pain Inventory (BPI): Pain severity (4 items) and pain interference with function (7 items)
Psychosocial screening (critical for chronic pain):
- Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS): 13 items, 0-52; score โฅ30 = clinically significant catastrophizing
- Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ): Physical activity subscale โฅ15 or work subscale โฅ34 = elevated fear-avoidance
- PHQ-9: Depression screening; score โฅ10 indicates moderate depression requiring intervention
- GAD-7: Anxiety screening; score โฅ10 indicates moderate anxiety
- Opioid Risk Tool (ORT): Score โฅ8 = high risk for opioid misuse
Functional assessment:
- Oswestry Disability Index (ODI): Lumbar spine; 0-100%; 0-20 minimal, 21-40 moderate, 41-60 severe, 61-80 crippled, 81-100 bed-bound/exaggerating
- Neck Disability Index (NDI): Cervical spine; same scoring categories as ODI
- DASH (Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand): Upper extremity function; 0-100
- Physical performance testing: 5-minute walk test, repeated sit-to-stand, loaded carry, positional tolerance (sitting, standing, walking)
Step 2 โ Establish the Functional Restoration Framework
Chronic pain rehab uses function as the primary outcome, not pain intensity:
Core principles:
- Quota-based exercise (set targets in advance based on assessment, not pain response)
- Time-contingent activity pacing (rest periods scheduled by time, not pain)
- Graded activity exposure (progressive functional challenge in feared activities)
- Pain neuroscience education (understanding pain mechanisms reduces threat perception)
- Operant conditioning (reinforce functional behavior, not pain behavior)
Program structure:
- Intensive interdisciplinary: 4-8 hours/day, 3-5 days/week, for 3-6 weeks
- Standard outpatient: 2-3 sessions/week for 8-12 weeks
- Team composition: PT, OT, psychologist/counselor, physician, vocational counselor (if RTW focus)
Initial exercise prescription:
- Establish submaximal baseline using 80% of maximal performance on assessment day
- Set quota at 80% of submaximal baseline (starting point is deliberately below capacity)
- Progress quotas by 10-20% per week regardless of pain level
- Document time-based progression, not pain-based regression
Step 3 โ Implement Multidisciplinary Interventions
Physical therapy component:
- Aerobic conditioning: 20-40 min, 3-5x/week, RPE 3-5/10; walking, cycling, pool-based
- Strengthening: Major muscle groups, progressive resistance, quota-based sets/reps
- Flexibility: Sustained stretching program, yoga-based movement if appropriate
- Functional task training: Lifting, carrying, reaching, positional tolerance (simulated work tasks for RTW cases)
- Manual therapy: As adjunct only โ do not create passive treatment dependence
Psychological component (coordinate with psychologist):
- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for pain management
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) strategies
- Relaxation training (progressive muscle relaxation, diaphragmatic breathing)
- Graded exposure to feared movements and activities
- Sleep hygiene education (chronic pain and insomnia are bidirectional)
Occupational therapy component:
- ADL and IADL training with pacing strategies
- Ergonomic assessment and modification
- Work simulation and job-specific task training
- Energy conservation and body mechanics education
Medical management coordination:
- Opioid taper support: document current MME and taper schedule per physician
- Non-opioid pharmacology optimization (SNRIs, gabapentinoids, topical agents)
- Interventional procedures timing (if injections planned, coordinate with therapy schedule)
Step 4 โ Track Outcomes with Pain and Function Measures
Assessment schedule: Intake, mid-program, discharge, and 3-month follow-up
| Measure | MCID | Target |
|---|
| NPRS | 2 points | Improvement expected but not primary outcome |
| ODI/NDI | 6-10 points | Movement toward lower disability category |
| PCS | 7 points | Score below clinical threshold (<30) |
| FABQ-PA | 4 points | Score below elevated threshold (<15) |
| PHQ-9 | 5 points | Score reduction below moderate threshold |
| 6MWT or 5MWT | 50m / significant change | Improved exercise tolerance |
| Sit-to-stand (30 sec) | 2-3 reps | Improved LE functional strength |
| Work capacity (if RTW) | Hours/day tolerance | Progressive toward full duty |
Document functional gains over pain changes:
"Patient NPRS decreased from 7/10 to 5/10 (below MCID). However, ODI improved from 52% (severe) to 34% (moderate), sitting tolerance increased from 15 min to 45 min, walking distance improved from 200 ft to 1500 ft, and patient returned to modified duty work 6 hours/day. Functional restoration goals met despite persistent pain."
Step 5 โ Plan Discharge and Long-Term Self-Management
- Independent home exercise program with quota-based progression plan
- Flare-up management plan: written action steps for pain exacerbation that do not include regression to passive care
- Psychological coping strategies documented (patient demonstrates independently)
- Opioid status at discharge documented (current MME, reduction from baseline)
- Work status: full duty, modified duty, or restrictions with specific physical demand limitations
- Follow-up: pain management physician, psychologist PRN, community exercise program
- Relapse prevention: identify high-risk situations and coping responses
Checkpoint B โ Pre-Finalization Review
Before finalizing pain rehabilitation documentation:
Quality Audit
Guidelines
- Chronic pain rehabilitation uses the biopsychosocial model โ biological, psychological, and social factors all require assessment and intervention
- Function is the primary outcome; pain intensity reduction is secondary and should not be the sole measure of success
- Never reinforce pain behavior with documentation โ document functional achievements alongside pain reports
- Quota-based exercise is non-negotiable in functional restoration โ pain-contingent activity perpetuates disability
- Opioid tapering should be coordinated with the prescribing physician; therapists document functional changes during taper, not medication adjustments
- Fear-avoidance beliefs are the strongest predictor of chronic pain disability โ screen every patient
- Graded exposure requires collaboration with psychology โ do not attempt without training
- Workers compensation chronic pain cases require FCE and return-to-work documentation per jurisdictional guidelines
- Pain neuroscience education (PNE) has Level 1 evidence for reducing pain catastrophizing โ include in every chronic pain program
- Do not promise pain elimination โ set expectations for improved function, coping, and quality of life