Publication

HIV, Chronic Pain, and Health Disparities: The Increasing Role of Physical Therapy in a National Public Health Priority

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Last modified
  • 02/25/2025
Type of Material
Authors
    Sara Pullen, Emory University
Language
  • English
Date
  • 2016-10-01
Publisher
  • American Physical Therapy Association (APTA)
Publication Version
Copyright Statement
  • © 2016 Oncology Section, APTA.
Final Published Version (URL)
Title of Journal or Parent Work
ISSN
  • 2168-3808
Volume
  • 34
Issue
  • 4
Start Page
  • 158
End Page
  • 159
Abstract
  • Chronic pain is estimated to affect more than 100 million people in the United States. Recent legislation has called for restrictions of narcotic-based prescriptions to treat chronic pain. HIV-related chronic pain has emerged as a major symptom burden among people living with HIV (PLH) and can have a deleterious effect on quality of life. The overall costs of chronic pain (estimated between $560 billion and $630 billion per year) are especially illuminative when considering the comparatively low costs of physical therapy interventions. The increased chronicity and symptom burden of HIV disease call for an increasing role of physical therapy in the continuum of care for people with HIV and AIDS-related impairments; physical therapy should be an integral part of the multidisciplinary pain intervention recommended by the National Institutes of Health. Identification of improved therapeutic options to treat chronic pain and increasing physical therapy access to PLH in vulnerable communities is consistent with this national public health priority and could greatly improve quality of life in this patient population.
Research Categories
  • Health Sciences, Public Health
  • Health Sciences, Rehabilitation and Therapy
  • Health Sciences, General

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