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Alternative rehabilitation therapy – a different approach to personal injury treatment

If you have been injured in an accident that wasn’t your fault, you may very well need some professional medical treatment to help you to recover more quickly and more fully from your injuries.  In most cases, this rehabilitation will take the form of either physiotherapy (for moderate injuries such as whiplash and other soft tissue damage) or surgical procedures (to help broken bones to heal more cleanly or to repair damage to ligaments that may have been torn in an accident.  However in an increasing number of cases, personal injury claimants are also receiving alternative rehabilitation therapies, often with very positive results.

Pilates, the full body conditioning technique developed in 1920’s Germany to help injured soldiers recover, is one of the most widely used alternative rehabilitation technique for accident victims.  Although it was designed to benefit all areas of the body, pilates works particularly well for injuries to the knees, neck, back, hips, shoulders and also for rehabilitation following surgery.  As the exercises involved are mainly performed whilst sitting or reclining, pilates is very useful for people who may not be able to stand or support much weight after an accident.

Another alternative form of rehabilitation that is offered to some personal injury victims is a pain management programme.  These programmes aim to provide relief for people suffering from chronic pain conditions after an accident or other injury.  In many chronic pain conditions, it might be the case that the sufferer is continuing to feel the pain of an injury even after the injury has healed and the physical evidence has disappeared.  This might be because pain receptors in the body are still transmitting the sensation of pain to the brain.  Pain management programmes aim to treat the pain itself, rather than any underlying injury, which might be treated separately or which might have healed already.

Pain management programmes might prescribe medicines to reduce pain or to target problems with the way the sufferers brain is interpreting the pain signals, these medicines can include painkillers, anti-depressants and anti-convulsants.  On the other hand they might involve the use of physical therapies and exercise routines.  A third approach would be to look at the way the sufferer thinks about the pain and how it affects their mental wellbeing, which can be done using psychological techniques such as biofeedback and cognitive behavioural therapy.  The goal of all these treatments is to help people to experience a pain-free life, so that they can return to work and carry out day-to-day tasks, which can have benefits themselves.

Have you been injured in an accident?  Are you concerned that you might be suffering from a chronic pain condition?  Call Camps Solicitors today to find out about the rehabilitation therapies we might be able to arrange for you as part of a No-Win No-Fee compensation claim.

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About Neil Worrall

Neil is the Website Support and Marketing Assistant at Camps Solicitors. He has been working for Camps since 2007. Neil writes articles for the Camps website and for various local newspapers on topics related to personal injury law and compensation claims.

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