Nicola
For more than a year, Nicola had severe pain and restricted shoulder and arm movement. Before having decompression surgery, the GP prescribed painkillers, two steroid injections and physiotherapy but to no positive effect. Nicola felt they were dealing with her symptoms and not interested in finding out the cause of it. When she was referred to see a specialist, she felt she was being taking seriously for the first time. She is recovering from decompression surgery and feels confident that she will regain complete shoulder and arm mobility. She still experiences some pain, but doesn’t feel anxious because she knows it is part of the healing process.
In January 2013, Nicola started experiencing pain in her shoulder; by February, the pain had increased and by March, her shoulder started to catch. From then on she began to have what she said was an excruciating type of pain.
Nicola’s GP initially told her to take paracetamol but it didn’t do any good, and on a second visit the GP gave her Naproxen and Codeine, but the Codeine made her feel dizzy. Then, she got a prescription for Tramadol which helped her to sleep, but didn’t take the pain away. Meanwhile, Nicola had to work and look after her family while waiting for a hospital appointment.
By April 2013, her GP contacted the hospital again as well as referring Nicola for some physiotherapy. But exercise made the pain even worse and by May she went back to her doctor and pressed for something to be done. She went to the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, an NHS hospital to have a scan and had her first steroid injection. The pain-relief effects of the injection lasted for six months, but after that she was advised to take stronger painkillers. Nicola felt increasingly frustrated and wanted her health problem to be dealt with, not to be covered it up with pills.
Around October 2013, Nicola had and X-ray and a second steroid injection. This time it provided pain relief for two months and she was referred back to the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre. At the hospital, they suggested intense physiotherapy and an appointment to see the shoulder specialist. She refused physiotherapy because she was in severe pain and so far it had not worked.
Nicola received a letter from the specialist who, after seeing her scan, X-ray and ultrasound test’s results, indicated she needed decompression surgery and asked her to attend the pre-op assessment clinic. She was relieved as well as angry because she said that, up to that point, no health professional had listened to her and felt she should have been referred to a specialist sooner.
The first time Nicola was told what was wrong with her shoulder was at her pre-op meeting. She said the consultant went through everything in detail and she was made to feel like a person’. She watched the Technology Enhanced Patient Information (TEPI) video on her own and found it brilliant’. She is dyslexic, so she found the visual information much easier to understand. Later, she was able to explain what the surgery would be like to her mother and children. She didn’t feel scare and looked forward to have it done.
One of the things she was explained at her pre-op appointment was that after surgery, her shoulder would hurt for up to a year, but that it couldn’t be damage. Sometimes, she still feels pain but she thinks of it as part of the healing process and as a good pain’.
Living with severe pain and lack of shoulder and arm mobility had an impact on Nicola’s well-being. In November 2013, she was given antidepressants as she felt nobody was interested in helping her. Her medical problem was affecting her work; her ability to look after her family; housework and she was living with little or no sleep. Nicola feels lucky, however, that she has supportive children who have been with her throughout.
After surgery, Nicola got two weeks sick leave from work and had to go back when still recovering from the operation. She is a single parent and is finding herself struggling to get back up financially.
Nicola hasn’t done the post-surgery exercises because she feels that doing housework helps all the same. She feels her shoulder has improved, although she still gets pain when she lifts her arm. She is due to have her post-op follow up assessment soon and feels positive that, with the help of physiotherapy, she will be able to recover complete shoulder and arm flexibility and movement.