EFT for Chronic Pain — Chasing the Pain Technique
Specialized EFT protocol for chronic pain using the Chasing the Pain technique. Stapleton et al. (2025, European Journal of Pain) RCT demonstrating significant reduction in pain severity and interference, maintained at 6 months, with measurable neural changes.
Presentation
Chronic pain affects approximately 20% of the world's adult population and is one of the leading causes of disability, reactive depression, and reduced quality of life. Conventional approaches — analgesic pharmacology, physiotherapy, surgical interventions — frequently encounter significant limitations in complex chronic pain syndromes, including fibromyalgia, chronic low back pain, chronic tension headaches, neuropathic pain, and mixed somatic and psychological pain.
EFT for chronic pain, centered around the flagship technique "Chasing the Pain," represents a mind-body approach of remarkable efficacy that acts simultaneously on the neurobiological, psychological, and psychosocial components of chronic pain. This technique has been developed and validated by Australian researcher Peta Stapleton, whose research program spans over two decades and culminates in a randomized controlled trial published in 2025 in the European Journal of Pain.
What fundamentally distinguishes EFT from other pain management approaches is its ability to simultaneously treat three interdependent dimensions of chronic pain: (1) the direct neurobiological component — meridian point stimulation induces measurable changes in pain processing circuit activity; (2) the emotional component — chronic pain is intimately linked to unexpressed emotions and unresolved trauma; (3) the memory component — the chronic pain brain has learned to anticipate pain, creating central sensitization that perpetuates pain independently of the initial peripheral stimulus.
Core Principles
1. Precise Phenomenological Description: Chasing the Pain rests on the most precise and detailed description possible of the pain's sensory characteristics: exact anatomical location, size, geometric shape, imaginary color, surface texture, temperature, consistency, and intensity on a 0–10 scale. This transforms a diffuse subjective experience into a precise, workable therapeutic target.
2. Dynamic Transformation Tracking: The central counter-intuitive principle is to "follow" the pain in its transformations rather than "resist" its presence. After each tapping round, the practitioner has the patient reassess all pain dimensions. Pain frequently moves anatomically, changes color, modifies texture, or mutates into another sensation. Each transformation signals active therapeutic work.
3. Underlying Emotional Exploration: Most chronic pains "carry" unexpressed emotions or unresolved conflicts. After reducing physical intensity, the practitioner systematically explores emotional dimensions: "If this pain had an emotion, what would it be?" "If this pain were sending you a message, what would it say?"
4. Central Sensitization and Pain Memory: In chronic pains evolving for months or years, the brain has developed a pain memory and central sensitization. EFT works directly on this central pain memory, de-potentiating pain processing circuits at the limbic and prefrontal cortex level.
5. Secondary Gain Investigation: Some chronic pains are partially maintained by unconscious secondary gains. EFT addresses these dimensions gently and without judgment.
Technical Details
- Main technique
- Chasing the Pain — phenomenological description + tapping on descriptors + transformation tracking
- Primary scientific reference
- Stapleton et al. (2025), European Journal of Pain
- Evidence level
- High — peer-reviewed RCT, 6-month follow-up, online non-inferiority vs in-person demonstrated
- RCT program format
- 8 sessions of 90 minutes over 6 weeks
- Clinical session duration
- 60 to 90 minutes
- Recommended sessions
- 4 to 10 sessions depending on chronicity, intensity and identified emotional components
- Studied populations
- Chronic low back pain, fibromyalgia, joint pain, chronic headaches, post-surgical pain
- Recommended assessment tools
- NRS/VAS (Numeric Rating Scale 0–10), Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS)
- Documented neural measures
- Changes in insula, anterior cingulate cortex, basal ganglia activity (functional neuroimaging)
Main Indications
- Chronic low back pain — one of the most studied indications
- Fibromyalgia and diffuse pain syndrome — strong emotional component responds well to EFT integrative approach
- Chronic tension headaches and migraines
- Chronic joint pain — osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis in remission, post-traumatic joint pain
- Neuropathic pain — post-herpetic neuralgia, painful diabetic neuropathy, complex regional pain syndrome
- Chronic pelvic pain and endometriosis
- Oncological pain — complementary care to improve comfort
- Persistent post-surgical pain
- Central sensitization syndromes — chronic fatigue syndrome, painful IBS, multiple chemical sensitivity
Session Overview
A Chasing the Pain EFT session proceeds through seven interdependent steps:
- Initial assessment and contextualization (10–15 min): Pain history, circumstances of onset, previous treatments, quality of life impact. NRS pain intensity assessment.
- Precise phenomenological description (10–15 min): Location, size, shape, color, texture, temperature. These descriptors become direct tapping formulation material.
- First descriptive tapping rounds (15–20 min): 3–5 tapping rounds on precise pain description. Reassess all dimensions after each round. Follow pain wherever it moves.
- Emotional and memory exploration (15–20 min): Once intensity has reduced 2–3 points or qualitative changes appear, introduce emotional/memory exploration questions.
- Underlying trauma treatment (variable, 0–30 min): If specific traumatic memories are identified, treat with standard EFT protocol while observing how pain intensity evolves.
- Secondary gain investigation (5–10 min): Gently explore potential secondary gains of the pain.
- Final assessment and practice plan (5–10 min): Comparative initial/final reassessment and self-EFT practice plan establishment.
Variations and Sub-Techniques
6-week program (Stapleton RCT format): 8 sessions of 90 minutes over 6 weeks, validated by the RCT. Deliverable in-person, in groups, or online.
EFT combined with healing visualization: After reducing pain intensity through Chasing the Pain, integrate healing visualizations combined with EFT rounds on positive images.
Acute pain flare protocol: An abbreviated (15–20 min) version of Chasing the Pain for self-EFT use during acute pain flares, building patient self-management capacity.
Group EFT for chronic pain: Group formats (8–12 participants) allow collective treatment with surrogate EFT benefit — observing another patient obtain relief often triggers sympathetic pain reduction in participants.
Integration with physiotherapy: Growing numbers of EFT-trained physiotherapists integrate tapping rounds into sessions, targeting pain points during rehabilitation exercises.
Contraindications
- Undiagnosed pain — complete medical workup required before EFT
- Immediate acute post-traumatic or post-surgical pain — EFT complements but does not replace medical analgesic management
- Severe oncological pain crisis — analgesic titration takes priority
- Active unstabilized psychiatric disorders
- Severe fibromyalgia with cutaneous hypersensitivity — use air-tapping (imaginary tapping or 1 cm from skin)
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your doctor or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not substitute for conventional medical treatment. All chronic pain must be medically evaluated before using complementary approaches. EFT for pain is a complementary practice and must not lead to stopping or reducing prescribed analgesic treatment without medical advice.
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.