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Piloting a pain management support programme in Northern Ireland prisons Cover

Piloting a pain management support programme in Northern Ireland prisons

By: Una Convery  
Open Access
|Apr 2025

Abstract

Background: Healthcare in Prison (HiP) aims to  provide a quality, safe and effective service to all people in custody at least equivalent to that of the community. Our patients are often from the most marginalised parts of Northern Ireland and often have a high level of need, both from a mental and physical health perspective. Many of our patients are prescribed high doses of analgesics for chronic pain– this prescribing is inherited into the prison system due to the responsibility placed upon us to ensure continuity of medicines from community prescribers.

There has been a move away from the use of medication, including opioids, to treat chronic pain due to limited benefit. If medication is required, this should be in line with NICE Guidance and  include non-pharmacological alternatives e.g self-management programmes. Until now access to programmes such as the  Better days pain management programme was not available in our setting.  SPPG Pharmacy funded a pilot programme led by a joint Healthcare in prisons (HIP) working group and Resurgam Trust was piloted in HMP Magilligan.

Approach: A multidisciplinary group including  Hip pharmacists, nurses , physiotherapists and colleagues from Resurgam Trust agreed on recruitment of candidates, structure of course  (to allow for local  implementation given IT restrictions) and types of practical support deliverable. The programme was delivered over 6 sessions:

Week 1: Understanding pain + connecting with others living with pain

Week 2: Understanding Medicines for pain management

Week 3: What we eat and how it impacts pain

Week 4: Mental Health and Sleep

Week 5: Physiotherapy,  movement and pain

Week 6: Holistic Therapies and managing flares

13 participants attended  the programme.  It helped them to understand their pain more fully using a holistic approach to pain management. It explored the role of medicines, current evidence based guidelines, prescribing rationale and the limited benefits and side effects of medicines in pain management.  It included sessions on physiotherapy, mental health, sleep, eating well and 10 steps to living well with pain.  These sessions were tailored specifically to the prison environment and helped to empower and support the men to help to manage their pain. 

Results: Feedback from the participants was overwhelmingly positive with 64% of participants citing that they found the programme very helpful and 45% have indicated that they have reduced or cut down on their medication. There was a 16% reduction in the level of pain and discomfort and 17% reduction in anxiety and depression (as a result of chronic pain) participants experienced after programme completion. The programme demonstrated the positive impact of making pain management programmes available to people who live in prisons and the improvements that can be made over a relatively short period of time.  By collaborative working with Norther Ireland Prison Service the programme achieved meaningful outcomes that (positively)impacted on our patients journey and  empowered them in the management of their pain. These demonstrable outcomes evidence that support programmes  allow  those living with chronic pain to self-manage beyond medication. 

 

Language: English
Published on: Apr 9, 2025
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2025 Una Convery, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.