It is normal to experience some pain and discomfort after surgery, but there are ways to manage it. Find out what you can do to help manage your pain after surgery.
Find suggestions to help your teen manage their sickle cell pain using positive coping behaviours.
Teens living with hemophilia can learn about pains related to their bleeds, including the difference between acute and chronic pain.
Learn the signs and causes of recurrent abdominal pain and when to get medical help.
Most children have at least some pain after an operation, which is called post-operative pain. Learn about relieving a child's post-operative pain at home.
Learn about the 3P approach to pain management, which is a combination of psychological, physical and pharmacological (medications) strategies.
Learn about how we feel pain, what acute and chronic pain are and the most common causes of pain in people with sickle cell disease.
Find out why and how you feel pain, whether from JIA or another source, such as a needle or cut, and learn the differences between acute and chronic pain.
Learn about how relaxation can help you reduce stress, manage pain and be better able to take part in daily activities.
Teens living with hemophilia can learn the medicines that help relieve pain.
Babies can feel pain. Learn about ways pain in newborns and babies can be assessed and techniques that can help ease pain.
The Pain Squad™ app helps children and teens with cancer to track their pain. Find out what this app does and the benefits of using it.
Find out how to recognize the signs of chronic pain at home and how chronic pain is assessed in medical settings.
Learn about the different tools and sources of information that can help assess your child's pain.
Bone pain is one of the most challenging aspects of osteoporosis. Learn about the different ways that bone pain can be treated.
Discover some coping strategies you can use during a JIA flare-up. These strategies can help reduce pain by changing the way your pain signals are being sent to and from your brain.
Pain can be caused by cancer, procedures, treatments or symptoms of cancer and treatments. Find out how you can manage and how your health-care team can help you.
Learn about the various medications that are used to treat pain. These include acetaminophen, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), opioids, and local and topical anaesthetics.
Find out how the 3P approach to pain management can help your teen manage their chronic pain.
Read about the long-term consequences of pain on a child, the importance of a child's pain management. A discussion of pain myths is included.
This page give advice on how to relieve a child's pain at home.
When you have pain, it may feel hard enough just to do the activities you need to do, but it's important to also do activities you enjoy. Learn about incorporating enjoyable activities to help you feel happier and reduce your pain.
Learn about pain assessment of younger school-age children. By this age, children begin to develop a sense of cause and effect concerning their pain.