Although there have been previous studies that suggest women have a higher pain tolerance than men, a new study out of the University of Malaga suggests that a person’s resiliency, not their sex, determines how well they handle chronic pain.
For their study, researchers analyzed numerous traits among 400 patients suffering from chronic spine pain (210 women and 190 men). What they found was that personal qualities, not genetic differences, was the best indicator of how a person dealt with chronic pain.
In essence, certain men and women have a very difficult time managing chronic symptoms, while others are able to work through the discomfort. The people who don’t let the pain bog them down are the same people you’d want on your basketball team when you’re down 10 points in the fourth quarter or if you need a big last week to meet your quarterly sales goals, because the research suggests that how a person handles adverse circumstances is the primary quality linked to an individual’s pain tolerance and how they adjust to chronic pain.
According to the researchers, the findings suggest more similarities than differences between men and women.
“More resilient individuals tend to accept their pain, that is, they tend to understand that their ailment is chronic and they stop focusing on trying to get the pain to disappear, to focus their energy on enhancing their quality of life, despite the pain, said Carmen Ramirez-Maestra, the study’s lead author. “In this regard, patients who are able to accept their pain feel less pain, they are more active on a daily basis and have a better mood.”
So remember, treating chronic pain is only half the battle. Dealing with, accepting, and not letting pain wear you down are other pieces to the pain puzzle.
Related source: Daily Digest News