Search Results for 'Suffering'

31 results found.

Back pain sufferers wanted for research programme

People who are unable to work or are on reduced work hours due to back pain are being sought to take part in a research programme at NUI Galway.

Pain: Symptom or disease?

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When I interviewed Dr. David Finn of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at NUI, Galway, I alluded at first to a statement I found in one of his recently published papers: “The study of stress-induced analgesia has enhanced our understanding of the fundamental physiology of pain and stress and can be a useful approach for uncovering new therapeutic targets for the treatment of pain and stress-related disorders.”

New courses at Connemara College of Natural Healing

It is springtime and time for new beginnings. First of all you need to prepare yourself with a good course. Connemara College of Natural Healing will hold an introductory weekend workshop on Kairos Therapy on May 7 and 8 from 10am to 5.30pm.

New courses at Connemara College of Natural Healing

There will be an introductory weekend workshop on Kairos Therapy on May 7 and May 8 from 10am to 5.30pm.

Coping with chronic pain

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Aiden Kennedy had just moved to Australia in 1987 when a boating accident changed his life forever.

Counting the cost of chronic pain

The introduction of improved services for people in the early stages of chronic pain could help cut the “sizeable” economic burden caused by the condition - an estimated €4.76 billion per year - in Ireland, a leading Galway based expert said this week.

Proust Questionnaire

What is your idea of perfect happiness?

Learning to treat yourself with compassion

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You feel lonely and depressed. When you look inside you find an aching heart and a lack of hope and optimism for the days ahead.

Whatever your job, your body takes the strain

Are you too tired to play with the kids, too sore to go for a walk or too stiff to go dancing?

Help the people who know those who need help

In Dickens’ time, poverty was easy to identify. People in that category would, according to the writer, sidle up to you in the street and say ‘spare a tannah for a cuppa tea, guv. Bless ya.” These days it is not so easy to identify want in people.

 

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