Topic
Active, Passive and Self-Management Approaches to Pain
Not all pain treatments work in the same way. Some are things done to you, some require your active participation, and some you can do entirely on your own. This article explains the difference between passive, active, and self-management approaches to persistent pain, and why active participation tends to matter most for long-term progress.
Assest ID
FRS-001 Active, Passive and Self-Management Approaches
Discusson Prompts
Which of the three approaches (passive, active, self-management) makes up most of your current pain care? Is there a balance you'd like to shift?
Have you noticed a difference in how long relief lasts between passive and active treatments you've tried?
What is one active strategy you've been hesitant to try, and what's behind that hesitation?
How could a passive treatment be used to create a "window of opportunity" for more active work?
Reflection Questions
Looking at your current pain management, would you describe it as mostly passive, mostly active, or a mix of both?
Is there a particular active strategy (movement, exercise, a program) you've avoided because of fear or uncertainty?
What would help you feel ready to try it?
Do you already use any self-management strategies, like pacing or a pain diary? How well are they working for you?
What is one small active step you could take this week to build toward longer-term progress?
Is there a conversation you'd like to have with your healthcare team about rebalancing your treatment plan toward more active approaches?
Suggested Resources
GBL-001 – Functional Restoration and Recovery
LBP-001 – Taking Back Control Through Self-Management
Pain Pal – for questions about which approaches might suit your situation
Knowledge Base Text
Three Different Ways to Approach Pain
When people think about treating pain, they often picture things like medication, injections, or surgery — treatments that are done to them. These are real and sometimes necessary parts of pain care. But they are only one part of a much bigger picture.
Pain management approaches generally fall into three broad categories: passive, active, and self-directed (self-management). Understanding the difference between them can help you build a more balanced and effective approach to your own pain, rather than relying on just one type.
Passive Interventions — Things Done For You
Passive interventions are treatments where you are present but not actively participating in the treatment itself. Someone else — a healthcare professional — is doing the work.
Examples include:
massage and manual therapy
acupuncture
heat or cold therapy
some medications
injections
surgery
Passive treatments can be genuinely useful, especially for short-term relief during a flare-up, or when pain is severe and you need some immediate comfort before you can engage in other strategies.
However, passive treatments tend to have a limitation: their benefits are often short-lived. They can reduce pain in the moment, but on their own they rarely build the strength, confidence, or skills needed for long-term improvement. This is why most current pain guidelines suggest passive treatments work best as a supporting part of a broader plan — not as the main strategy.
Active Interventions — Things You Do, With Support
Active interventions require your participation. They take effort, and they usually involve working with a therapist, instructor, or program — but the work is yours to do.
Examples include:
exercise and movement programs
physiotherapy-guided rehabilitation
yoga, Tai Chi, or Pilates
graded return to activity
pain education programs
psychological strategies such as relaxation training or cognitive behavioural approaches
Active interventions are consistently linked to better long-term outcomes for persistent pain. This is because they don't just reduce symptoms in the moment — they help rebuild strength, movement confidence, and the belief that your body can be trusted again.
It's common to feel hesitant about returning to movement or activity, especially if pain has limited you for a long time. This hesitation is understandable, but research shows that a gradual, structured return to activity — rather than waiting until pain fully resolves — is usually the most effective path forward.
Self-Management — Things You Do on Your Own
Self-management (sometimes called self-directed care) refers to strategies you can use independently, without needing a professional present. These build on what you learn through active interventions and turn them into everyday habits.
Examples include:
pacing activities throughout the day
using relaxation or mindfulness techniques
setting and tracking personal goals
keeping a pain diary
maintaining sleep and activity routines
problem-solving day-to-day challenges
Self-management doesn't replace medical or allied health care — it works alongside it. The goal is to help you feel less like a passive recipient of treatment and more like an active participant in your own recovery.
Why Active Approaches Matter Most
It's tempting to look for the treatment that will simply take the pain away. But for persistent pain, research consistently points to a different conclusion: the most lasting improvements in function, confidence, and quality of life tend to come from active participation — not from passive treatments alone.
This doesn't mean passive treatments have no place. A massage might help you feel comfortable enough to attend a physiotherapy session. A short course of medication might create a window where you can start moving again. Passive care can support active care — but it shouldn't replace it.
Bringing It Together
A well-rounded approach to persistent pain usually includes a mix of all three:
Passive support, used selectively — for example, during a flare-up
Active strategies, building strength, movement, and confidence over time
Self-management skills, helping you apply what you've learned in daily life
If your current pain management feels like it relies heavily on passive treatments — medications, procedures, or things done to you — it may be worth asking your healthcare team about active and self-management options that could be added alongside.
Key Take-Home Messages
Passive interventions (massage, medication, injections) are things done for you — useful for short-term relief, but limited on their own
Active interventions (exercise, movement programs, psychological strategies) require your participation and tend to produce better long-term outcomes
Self-management (pacing, goal setting, relaxation, routines) are strategies you use independently to support ongoing recovery
The strongest approach to persistent pain usually combines all three, with active participation at the centre
