Their 5 day healing challenge from Instagram which I got an email to follow. This is day 1
Yes.
So they have a curable fear busting workshop for around $90
And curable “groups” which is like an exclusive group you can join with other people and do extra sessions together and have group chats over 12 weeks, it costs I think somewhere around $1600 or $1800
Although 2 apps (Headspace and SuperBetter) were validated to show improved health outcomes, none were tested in people with persistent pain. Both users and clinicians should be aware of such limitations and make informed choices in using or recommending apps as a self-management tool.
Devan is now involved in a Health Research Council-funded project to create an online self-help tool based on the 12-week pain-management programme offered by Wellington’s Capital & Coast DHB. The idea is that this can be used for ongoing support by patients who have been through a programme or by those still struggling to access one.
One of the keys of self-management is understanding the mechanisms of chronic pain,” he says. “People often think of it as more of an acute-pain model: rest and recover. But for chronic pain, rest doesn’t work. It makes it worse.
Overall, curable is a comprehensive pain education tool with a focus on the psychology of pain and emotions. I would highly recommend it to anyone with chronic pain who would like to try tackle the psychology of their pain.
That is a very sweeping statement. It may be true for some pain conditions, but it's certainly not my experience with ME. The more I push myself to my energy limits, the worse my pain.One of the keys of self-management is understanding the mechanisms of chronic pain,” he says. “People often think of it as more of an acute-pain model: rest and recover. But for chronic pain, rest doesn’t work. It makes it worse.
“People often think of it as more of an acute-pain model: rest and recover. But for chronic pain, rest doesn’t work. It makes it worse.
Looks like it's a very early stage prototype. From what I saw it seems the idea is people input their diagnoses, symptoms, treatments and how well they work. Then the technology works out which other user have the closest match for symptoms and diagnoses, and tells you what treatments they have found effective and ineffective.article about another app
The UX-Design of the ME/CFS-app Life Peers
The real challenge with projects like this is quality of content. It takes a huge effort to ensure that, with associated costs that are pure loss and those don't scale well, not much economies of scale. To work properly it would need serious public money and backing from institutions, as they would otherwise not trust the data.Looks like it's a very early stage prototype. From what I saw it seems the idea is people input their diagnoses, symptoms, treatments and how well they work. Then the technology works out which other user have the closest match for symptoms and diagnoses, and tells you what treatments they have found effective and ineffective.
I can only imagine this working if there are hundreds of thousands of participants. Even then, the detail needed for each would be huge.
A little oddity - the only treatment mentioned in the article is 'cycling'.
Sounds like a recipe for spreading quackery to me.
With the Pain Toolkit app you’ll learn more about:
Accepting pain so you can begin to move on
Understanding the ‘pain cycle’ – and how to reverse it
Pacing and relaxation skills