Running with Pain

Sharyn O’Halloran

The motto “no pain, no gain” drives athletes to push through the intense discomfort of strenuous physical exertion to the nirvana of endorphin induced bliss on the other side.  But many times, the pain doesn’t stop.  No matter how much grinning and bearing you do, the pain becomes chronic and may even intensify.  It is at these times that you need to re-evaluate your training program and seek the advice of a health expert.

Women, unfortunately, have difficultly following this common sense advice for two conflicting reasons. First, women are slower to seek medical attention for an injury than are men.  They will wait until the pain becomes simply unbearable (I know, I’m one.) Second, when women do seek medical attention, doctors are less likely to treat the pain itself than males with the same aliment.  Female pain, unlike male pain, is viewed as psychological not physiological.  In both cases, a women’s pain goes untreated.

What is the pain gap?

Women and men experience pain differently.  Studies repeatedly show that across all disease categories women feel more acute pain.  A Stanford University study examined gender-related differences in pain intensity as reported on 1-to-10 scale, in which a zero stands for “no pain” and 10 for “worst imaginable.”  The research found statistically significant higher pain scores for female patients across all categories. Moreover, the reported differences were clinically significant: a pain-score improvement of one point is what clinical researchers view as indicating that a pain medication is working.

recent article in the Wall Street Journal summarized over 15 years of clinical studies, reaffirming the findings that women are both more likely to develop chronic painful conditions and to report greater pain than men with the same condition. Women also express more acute pain than men even after the same surgeries, such as wisdom tooth extraction, gall bladder removal, hernia repair and hip and knee surgery.

In addition, women repeatedly exhibit lower thresholds (report pain at lower levels of stimulus intensity) and tolerance (can’t bear intense painful stimulation as long) for various types of pain.  For example, while men and women have comparable thresholds for cold and ischemic (decreased blood flow) pain, women have lower pain thresholds for pressure-induced pain than men. Similarly, women tolerate less heat and cold pain than men, but tolerance for ischemic pain is comparable between men and women.

Why the difference?

While hormones play a role, part of the problem is behavioral. Women usually wait longer to seek medical intervention like surgery. In contrast, men tend to seek surgery before their pain becomes extreme. The surgery itself is equally beneficial for both sexes, but because a woman typically has more advanced disease by the time she gets surgery, the result often isn’t as good.

2008 Canadian study also shows that medical professionals respond differently to female and male pain.  Even when women  seek medical help, they are less likely to be treated.  For example, the odds of a surgeon recommending knee replacement were 22 times higher for a male patient than a female. Moreover, when expressing symptomatic pain, women are more likely to be sedated while men are more likely to receive pain medication.

What to do?

1)   Know Your Pain—Log when your pain occurs.  If it is episodic or happens during the monthly cycle, hormones could be at play. If it happens during long runs, changing your workout to accommodate these fluctuations could help mitigate some of the pain.  If it is chronic, seek medical advice.  Knowing when and under what conditions your pain is expressed will help with diagnosis and treatment.

2)   The Obvious is Not Always Obvious—I always assume I know the cause of my pain.  I have an amazing track record: I am always wrong.  While symptoms may be felt like a tight hamstring, the cause may have nothing to do with the hamstring.  In my case, a chronically tight hamstring that would not respond to stretching and downtime was not caused by a muscle pull but by musculoskeletal misalignment.  Go figure.

3)   Seek Medical Advice Early—Don’t wait.  If an injury is not responding to topical remedies seek medical advice early on.  I muscled through my pain and completed a marathon and ultra-marathon under excruciating circumstances.  I probably did more damage than good.

4)   Mix-it-Up –Imbalances in muscular strength and flexibility are typical byproducts of extensive endurance training and a recipe for injury.  Cross training  will help maintain your endurance and strength even while you allow yourself to heal.  Weight training and water aerobics, along with a consistent stretching routine, provide the best defense against repeat injury.

5)   Persistence—The same determination that makes you an endurance athlete is going to get you the health results you want. My podiatrist thinks I have a crush on him because I visit so often.  That may be true, although I don’t date married men, but I insist that he gets my orthotic insoles correct.  Otherwise, there is another good-looking podiatrist just down the block.

Sources:

 Copyright © 2014 womenontherunblog.com. All rights reserved.

How to Stay Motivated to Run

Sharyn O’Halloran

Staying motivated to run long distances while juggling constant demands from work and family is very hard. Here are a few tricks that I have found along the way.

1) Compete in Local Races— Join a running club that sponsors local events. I belong to the New York Road Runners, which hosts racing events almost every weekend throughout the year. Competing in a race forces me to stay on my training program.

2) Virtual Coach— When I am training for a long distance event, and even if I am not, I always sign up with a  Virtual Coach. Each night I get an email telling me what my workout program is for the next day. I don’t have to think about it. I just do what the coach says (more or less).

3) Cross-Training— Running high volume miles consistently week-after-week can take its toll and, frankly, it can get boring. To mix it up, I weight train, ride bike and participate in body sculpting classes for core strengthening. Over the course of a week, I complete my long runs, while getting a full-body workout.

4) Stretching and Yoga—One of the best ways to ward off injury is to incorporate a stretching routine into your daily workout. This could be done in the morning or night. I usually go through a set of classic runners stretches for hip flexors, hamstring and quads. I also like to include some basic yoga poses to both stretch and strengthen core muscles.

5) Virtual Training Partner—I find it impossible to coordinate my training sessions with another equally busy person. Instead, as a commitment device, I have a friend that I email before and after my long runs and before and after racing events. Being answerable to another human being, even if virtually, pushes me to complete the task, especially when I am tired and hurting.

Copyright © 2014 womenontherunblog.com. All rights reserved.

New York Road Runners Club Champions Commitment to Running

Promoting the sport of running as a means to health and wellness, the New York Road Runners club hosts numerous race activities including marathons and ultra-marathons. Sharyn O’Halloran, a professor in the department of political science and professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University, trained to run marathons and ultimately ran her first 60K (37.28 mile) race with the club in 2013. The Road Runners club provides an outlet for individuals like Sharyn O’Halloran to embrace the sport of running. The organization provides inspiration to individuals to get them running and keep them running as they develop a lifelong commitment to better health.

Recognized globally as a premiere running organization, the New York Road Runners club holds internationally recognized events including the TCS New York City Marathon. The club, established more than half a century ago, boasts some 55,000 members who participate in the city’s annual marathon. Passionate about promoting the sport of running into the future, the club sponsors numerous youth educational programs and activities.

Community Impact at Columbia University

The author of several scholarly books and numerous articles on contemporary American politics, Sharyn O’Halloran teaches political economy and international and public affairs at New York City’s Columbia University. In addition to her writing, research, and instructional duties, Professor Sharyn O’Halloran belongs to the board of directors of Community Impact at Columbia University.

Founded in 1981, Community Impact at Columbia University (CI) has become the university’s primary interface with the New York City communities of Harlem, Morningside Heights, and Washington Heights. An integrated service organization with a strong emphasis on education, its student and faculty volunteers identify areas of need within the community where CI can reasonably have an impact.

Independent of the university, CI operates on a not-for-profit basis in the operation of programs that serve more than 8,000 area residents annually. About 900 volunteers from Columbia and Barnard College participate in CI’s 27 community service programs that cover a broad swath of areas, including emergency services, adult education, health and environment, and youth programs. Another area, leadership, provides volunteers the opportunity to learn and experience management of a non-profit enterprise.

CI is governed by a combination of a board of directors, made up of professionals from Columbia and the community, and four student representatives. CI’s day-to-day operation, though, is guided by a group of seven elected student executives who work in close collaboration with the board of directors.

Harlem rezoning project brings together diverse group of community members and stakeholders by Sharyn O’Halloran

When the 125th Street Rezoning project in Harlem received approval for its comprehensive list of recommendations in 2005, it was a result of countless hours of input by community participants and Advisory Board members. The project, undertaken by the New York City Department of City Planning, was massive in scope with ambitious goals to rezone for the multi-dimensional purposes of arts, culture, entertainment, aesthetics, functionality, and transportation. Beginning in 2003, the project team, composed of a richly diverse group of elected officials, civic groups, cultural organizations, and investors, continued to provide ongoing feedback to the Advisory Committee through an ongoing series of meetings. Cultural heritage landmarks such as the Apollo Theater rose to the spotlight during discussions about promoting identity to create “critical mass,” while other presentations centered on issues of economy and creating a functional and aesthetic streetscape.

Sharyn O’Halloran, a Political Economy professor at Columbia University, served on the New York City Department of City Planning’s 125th Street Rezoning Advisory Board.