Chronic Pain therapists in Mossend, Scotland Scotland, United Kingdom GB
Kamran Bedi
Therapist, Advanced Anxiety/PTSD treatment and Confidence building. Fast results. IEMT, NLP, Hypnotherapy.
I have over 10 years experience as a pilates instructor and have used NLP and Hypnosis to help people with chronic pain. I have also used IEMT to help people improve their pain challenges. With chronic illness, exploring an individuals lifestyle, emotions and past can also help relieve symptoms.
11 Years Experience
Mary Knoblock
Hypnotherapist, Licensed RTT Practitioner, Clinical Hypnotist, Duke Certified Health Coach, Spiritual Counselor
For chronic pain I enjoy helping patients navigate through their health journey and patients tend to enjoy working with me withIn different modalities to help them feel better.
9 Years Experience
Shareen Birges
Registered Social Worker, BASS, GDYMH, MSW
I have experience working with people with chronic pain & illness & know the delicate balance that is needed to manage these issues. My person centered & strengths based practice helps me to support a person's individual needs & to support their families. I also specialise in working with individuals & their families around their cancer experience, including end of life care.
16 Years Experience
Alison Edwards CBT Therapy & Supervision
Psychologist, CBT Therapist, FMBPsS, MA (Hons), MSc, CertCouns, MSc
I’m experienced in working with clients who have longstanding difficulties with pain or physical health conditions, which might have taken a long time to be diagnosed or been difficult to manage. This includes non-epileptic seizures/ blackouts, post-viral fatigue, ME, Functional Neurological Disorders, Functional Pain Syndromes, and Long Covid. I provide CBT, the recommended psychological therapy for these difficulties, and my work also encompasses Compassion-Focused Therapy and Mindfulness-based therapy. I'm a member of a UK-wide expert supervision group on non-epileptic seizures, Functional Neurological Disorders and medically unexplained symptoms.
16 Years Experience
Dr Ian Anderson
Psychologist, Consultant Clinical Psychologist (HCPC registered), PhD, MSc, MSc, MSc, MA (Econ), BA (Econ) Hons
My question is if you break your leg, where is the pain? Actually, it's in your mind. The nerve receptors around the injury send messages to your brain, and your brain sends out pain messages. I really do not mean this to be facile, but all pain is interpreted by the mind. Even though pain is a real physical event, competent psychological therapy can help you process pain in such a way that you can still live your life in the way you would wish.
44 Years Experience