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posted by on Wednesday April 19 2017, @11:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the psychosomatics-unite dept.

For more than two thousand years people have believed that joint pain could be triggered by bad weather, but the link has never been proven.

But now, by harnessing the power of thousands of volunteers, doctors hope to unravel the mystery. And the new technique could offer countless solutions to a whole host of ailments.

[...] Each day she enters information about how she feels into an app on her phone, the phone's GPS pinpoints her location, pulls the latest weather information from the internet, and fires a package of data to a team of researchers.

On its own Becky's data is of limited interest, but she isn't acting alone. More than 13,000 volunteers have signed up for the same study, sending vast quantities of information into a database - more than four million data points so far.

The app, called "Cloudy with a Chance of Pain" is part of a research project being run by Will Dixon. He is a consultant rheumatologist at Salford Royal Hospital and has spent years researching joint pain.

My rheumatism is triggered when the wife asks me to carry heavy, heavy things up to our 3rd-floor walk-up...


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  • (Score: 1) by purple_cobra on Saturday May 06 2017, @08:30PM

    by purple_cobra (1435) on Saturday May 06 2017, @08:30PM (#505537)

    I took sulfasalazine for a while - up until my doctor finally listened to my protests that it was doing nothing at all! - and that required monthly blood tests for 12-18 months. As I'm no great fan of being punctured this was not welcome news, but as that stuff was supposed to alleviate the problem I just put up with it. Opioids (in my case 4-6 30/500 co-codamol daily) definitely make me feel a bit slower, less mentally alert, enough that I'd rather not take them at all, but for the moment it's either take them or don't work and I'd rather keep my job, crappy though it is. :)

    I'm always surprised at the people who want to lock drug addicts up rather than get them treated, clean and functioning as members of society again. Locking people up is bloody expensive and, ultimately, isn't curing the problem, merely moving it somewhere else for a while. Given the success of countries like Portugal in modifying how they deal with addicts and, ultimately, significantly reducing the problem, it's even more puzzling.