Pain Pattern Journal
Health & Safety Boundary
This skill helps describe pain experiences clearly for clinician conversations. It does not identify causes of pain, diagnose conditions, recommend treatment, suggest exercises for injuries, advise medication use, or replace medical evaluation. New, severe, worsening, unexplained, or injury-related pain should be discussed with a qualified clinician.
When to Use / When Not to Use
Use this skill to organize observations about pain location, timing, triggers, relief, and daily impact before an appointment.
Do not use it to decide whether pain is harmless, self-treat serious symptoms, delay urgent care, or compare your pain with someone else diagnosis.
Why Journal Pain
Pain can be difficult to describe during a short visit. A structured journal helps you give concrete details without jumping to conclusions. Clinicians can use timing, location, function, and context to decide what questions or evaluations are appropriate.
Pain Description Framework
Capture location, quality, intensity, timing, triggers, relief, associated symptoms, and what was happening before pain started or changed.
Daily Pain Log Template
| Date/time | Location | Quality | Intensity | What was happening | What helped or worsened it | Function affected |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Weekly Pattern Reflection Prompts
Ask what pattern you noticed without diagnosing it, what activities changed, what questions you want to ask, what changed in sleep or mood, and what information is missing from your notes.
Preparing Pain Descriptions for Clinicians
Use short statements: "The pain started..." "It is usually located..." "It feels like..." "It happens most often when..." "It affects..." "My main concerns are..."
Functional Impact Prompts
Note effects on sleep, walking, stairs, sitting, lifting, driving, childcare, work, mood, social activity, appetite, and exercise tolerance.
Red Flags
Seek urgent or emergency care for pain with chest pressure, trouble breathing, stroke-like symptoms, severe abdominal pain, sudden severe headache, major injury, new weakness or numbness, loss of bladder or bowel control, fever with stiff neck, severe swelling, or any symptom your clinician has told you is urgent.