A Comprehensive Approach to Pain
Chronic pain affects nearly every aspect of a person’s life, impairing their ability to function physically and psychologically and interfering with the everyday enjoyment of life. Family relationships and careers can suffer, creating financial stress and damaging that person’s identity and sense of self worth.
Comprehensive Pain and Rehabilitation (CPR) is a multidisciplinary organization devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of chronic pain using an integrated program of interventional pain medicine, behavioral medicine and functional rehabilitation. Our goal is to reduce both pain and its negative impact in order to enable our patients to live more productive and satisfying lives.
Click here to read more about us.
In The News
-
Read more...
March 31 – April 1, 2012
Hilton Sandestin, Destin, FloridaTaking the Fear Out of the Chronic Pain Patient
Huntington Hapworth, M.D., Pain Management, Comprehensive Pain & RehabilitationStrategies for Pain Management: Case-Based Discussion
Matthew Barfield, D.O., Physical & Rehabilitation Medicine | Huntington Hapworth, M.D., Pain Management
Comprehensive Pain & Rehabilitation, Pascagoula, MS
Singing River Health System -
Read more...
Comprehensive Pain and Rehabilitation Opens cutting edge Ambulatory Surgery Center offering state of the art care to the Southeast Region.
PASCAGOULA, MS (August 1, 2011)
The physicians of Comprehensive Pain and Rehabilitation (CPR) are now seeing patients in the new 16,000 square foot Ambulatory Surgery Center (ASC) in Pascagoula, MS. The cutting edge facility has been designed exclusively for our patient population and features exam rooms, procedure rooms and a fully equipped operating room staffed…
-
Read more...
By Casandra Andrews, Press-Register
DAPHNE, AL (July 26, 2011)In 2005, Adam Newell fell 10 feet from scaffolding, shattering his left ankle, fracturing a leg bone and damaging his back as he smacked down hard on red clay. The carpenter spent weeks in the hospital recovering from his extensive injuries.
In the months that followed, Newell thought the stabbing pain that left him disabled might never subside. Finding little relief from pills,…





