Meditation Reduced The Opioid Dose She Needs To Ease Chronic Pain By 75%

To deal with chronic pain, Pamela Bobb’s morning routine now includes stretching and meditation at home in Fairfield Glade, Tenn. Bobb says this mind-body awareness and intervention has greatly reduced the amount of painkiller she needs.

There’s new evidence that mind-body interventions can help reduce pain in people who have been taking prescription opioids — and lead to reductions in the drug’s dose.

In a study published this month in JAMA Internal Medicine, researchers reviewed evidence from 60 studies that included about 6,400 participants. They evaluated a range of strategies, including meditation, guided imagery, hypnosis and cognitive behavioral therapy.

“Mindfulness, cognitive behavioral therapy and clinical hypnosis appear to be the most useful for reducing pain,” says study author Eric Garland, a professor at the University of Utah. The reductions in dose were modest overall, he says, but the study is a signal that this approach is beneficial.