What to expect:
Pain reprocessing therapy (PRT) is an approach to pain management that focuses on simple techniques for “rewiring” the neural pathways in the brain to deactivate pain.
PRT focuses on the pain signaling system rather than the parts of the body where the pain is felt. Dr. Yoni Ashar tested this approach in 2017, with his groundbreaking study affectionately known as The Boulder Back Study.
Dr. Ashar published his results in JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, clinically proving the effectiveness of the PRT approach. 98% of participants who received PRT treatment lowered their pain, and 2 out of 3 people who did this treatment got their pain into remission.
This workshop covers:
• The psychological and neurobiological processes that cause primary pain
• The PRT treatment framework
• Practical instruction about how to apply PRT principles to your life
Watch the recording right here:
What to expect:
Pain reprocessing therapy (PRT) is an approach to pain management that focuses on simple techniques for “rewiring” the neural pathways in the brain to deactivate pain.
PRT focuses on the pain signaling system rather than the parts of the body where the pain is felt. Dr. Yoni Ashar tested this approach in 2017, with his groundbreaking study affectionately known as The Boulder Back Study.
Dr. Ashar published his results in JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, clinically proving the effectiveness of the PRT approach. 98% of participants who received PRT treatment lowered their pain, and 2 out of 3 people who did this treatment got their pain into remission.
This workshop covers:
• The psychological and neurobiological processes that cause primary pain
• The PRT treatment framework
• Practical instruction about how to apply PRT principles to your life
About your hosts
About your host
Yoni Ashar, Ph.D.
Yoni is a clinical psychologist, neuroscientist, and father of three. Yoni’s research uses functional MRI brain imaging, natural language processing, and other tools to understand how mind and brain processes influence health and chronic pain. Yoni is an NIH-funded postdoctoral associate at Weill Cornell Medicine. He completed his doctorate at the University of Colorado Boulder. His research in chronic pain has been featured in several news outlets, including the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and CBS.