Closed on public holidays and on Wellington Anniversary Day.
You must have an outpatient appointment to attend these clinics. A clinic letter is sent out to prospective patients prior to the scheduled clinic date.
The service will close on Christmas Eve 2008 and re-open on Monday 12th January 2009.
The CCDHB Chronic Pain Service
The Wellington Regional Pain Service serves the lower half of the North Island and the upper half of the South Island. The service is based at the Wellington Regional Hospital.
The service is a multidisciplinary service and is engaged in the various aspects of pain management, including multidisciplinary assessments and treatment, medication reviews, pain management programmes, functional assessments and interventional procedures.
Our aim is to facilitate both physical and emotional wellbeing and a return to a healthy and functional role in the family and community.
Our team members include:
- Doctors
- A Clinical Psychologist
- Occupational Therapists
- Physiotherapists
- Specialist Nurses.
Pain, by definition, is an unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described in terms of such damage. It is both a physiologic sensation and an emotional reaction to that sensation.
Some of the conditions treated in the clinic include the following:
- musculoskeletal pains - back pain, myofascial pain syndromes
- neuropathic pain
- complex regional pain syndrome - both types1 and 2
- amputation pain including phantom limb pain, stump pain, and phantom limb sensation
- headaches
- orofacial pain
- post herpetic neuralgias
- abdominal pain
- pelvic pain including endometriosis related pain
- opiate use and or misuse in conjunction with the Regional Drug and Alcohol Addiction services
- cancer pain, in conjunction with the Palliative Care Unit, in the form of medications and interventions.
Access to this service is via a referral from your specialist, GP or health professional and through the acute pain team of the Hospital.
As this service is a regional tertiary service, it is expected that your primary referrer has undertaken the relevant investigations and made the appropriate referrals. The management plan made will include your general practitioner.
Like all hospital clinics there is a waiting time prior to the clinic appointments, but all reasonable effort is made to minimise the waiting times.
The referrals are prioritised by a triage committee and based on the triage, are allocated for either a multidisciplinary assessment or medical only assessment. These referrals are then further streamlined into ACC-related and non-ACC or DHB referrals.
A clinic appointment and pain questionnaire are sent out following triage of the referral letters. A confirmation phone call is usually made prior to the clinic date and all patients are requested to bring with them all relevant investigations including x-rays, CT scans, MRIs and blood test results.
Please ensure that all patient details including all telephone numbers are current.
No appointment will be rescheduled if patients do not attend without contacting the Department.
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Comprehensive Pain Assessment
A comprehensive pain assessment involves being assessed by a pain specialist, a clinical psychologist and either a physiotherapist or occupational therapist...
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Medication Management
Medication management involves a medical only assessment and review of the relevant medication that the patient is on...
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Interventional Clinic
Following a full medical assessment, sometimes it is deemed that interventions are appropriate and the patients are booked for interventional procedures such as an epidural, infusions of calcitonin or a sympathetic block for peripheral vascular disease...
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Outpatient Physiotherapy
Outpatient physiotherapy sessions are provided by the department physiotherapist and she also is responsible for the TENS trials...
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Outpatient Psychology
The clinical psychologist is responsible for cognitive input and this forms an important part of the pain management process...
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Pain Management Programme
Various pain management programmes are run by the Clinic. The programmes are intensive and run from 8.30am to 4.30pm throughout the year. Patients are allocated to these programmes following various assessments.
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This service is free to all permanent residents of New Zealand. For visitors to the country, a service fee applies.
Patients seen under an ACC contract do not incur a charge; the cost of the service is paid by ACC.