Support for Young People with fibromyalgia
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- Published on Saturday, 31 May 2025 19:01
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Fibromyalgia
Living with fibromyalgia can be particularly challenging, especially for young individuals. It often affects your ability to spend time with friends and family, and it can significantly impact your education and hobbies. It may feel as though no one truly understands what it's like to live with this condition.
Stephanie: “ I use heat patches on my back especially during the winter. I have found physiotherapy, hydrotherapy and a pain management course helpful. I would recommend the pain management course to anyone as it covers everything. I do take some medicines, painkillers and tablets to help me sleep, but I don’t like taking medicine as a long-term solution.
My best coping strategy is distraction, whether it’s listening to music or talking to family and friends or going out and just getting on with things.”
What is fibro like for young people?
The symptoms are the same as adults, but it can be more difficult to be diagnosed. It feels like you are sore all over, as if you have run a marathon the day before, or you have the flu. Your limbs ache and sometimes feel too heavy to move easily.
You can also feel very tired and have difficulty sleeping at night. Your head can become muzzy, making it difficult to think clearly and remember things.
Symptoms can come and go over time and vary from person to person. Sometimes it feels like the pain is moving around your body from one area to another.
Reuben: “I find a thermal heat pad and an infrasound vibrator the most effective treatment. I also take vitamin supplements and herbal remedies. I haven’t found medication or alternative therapies very useful.”
What causes fibro?
The exact cause of fibromyalgia is still unknown. However, people with fibromyalgia feel a lot more pain than other people. This is because pain signals in fibromyalgia are amplified. It is as though someone has turned the switch to full volume.
So the nervous system, that carries pain signals up the spinal cord to the brain, is constantly set on maximum. Pain or touch, that would not bother other people, becomes painful and troublesome to a person with fibromyalgia.
It is like being as sensitive as the princess in the fairy tale The Princess and the Pea who could feel a hard pea concealed under many mattresses.
Carla: “I use heat. I have a hot bath or use a hot water bottle. I do have certain people I can talk to about my fibromyalgia, which helps. I also write poetry about how I feel"
How will your doctor know you have fibro?
Will I get better?
What can you do?
Work with the health professionals and your caregivers to try what is suggested. You can look at managing your activity levels by pacing what you do. This can result in you doing more, without exhausting your self or increasing your pain levels. It can be quite a difficult thing to learn, as the level of activity one person can cope with may be quite different to what another person can cope with. You basically have to work out your own boundaries and experiment with how much activity you can do before causing your symptoms to flare up. Remember that a flare up is not something to be afraid of, it is something to be learned from.
Sometimes, parents will worry and not want you to try out new activities because they don’t want you to be in more pain, which is perfectly understandable. But if you think you can do something it is important to give it a go as in this way you will learn what you are capable of and how much activity you can comfortably do in a day. If you are trying a new activity, start by doing it for a few minutes the first time and see what happens, then gradually increase the amount of time.
You can read a personal story from Katrina about her challenges of developing chronic pain at age 11 as she was looking to go to secondardy school.
Resources to help during school and university
There are more resources in our booklet but the list below can help youunderstand your rights and obtain support at school or university. Reasonable adjustments like more time for exams or aids such as a voice recorder may be available to you.
- Adjustments for Disabled students and apprentices | Disability Rights UK
- Disability rights: Education - GOV.UK
- Reasonable adjustments in college and university | Disability charity Scope UK
Support Resources
You can find out more about our helplines and support groups here including any notice due to holidays or closures.