CT is a very reputable school of therapy and is used for a broad array of problems. I have no direct experience with it in pain management, but I would suspect that it would be especially useful for handling residual pain that can neither be treated, nor ameliorated via other modalities. It is useful for keeping the right mental outlook. However, if drugs or other pain control modalities haven't been exhausted, and the pain is truly intractable, I would try those modalities first, before I resorted to CT.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Yes it is as far as i recall the only school of therapy that was evaluated as really working
(lol) . I think its because of the behavioural modification that also comes along with the changes in cognition. SOmetimes if you behave in a way to support the pain rather than get along with it or try to dismiss it, it goes a log way. I doubt though that cognitive therapy ALONE standing by itself can be really helping except the pain is only psychological induced, which it hardly ever is with chronic pain patients.
The problem also with medication only is the level of addiciton and the dosage supply that has to be increased. Its tough to monitor chronic pain wiht medication. So it might be really a good step to help