%0 Journal Article %T Five years of a community pain service solution %A Chris Barker %A Rebecca Simm %J British Journal of Pain %@ 2049-4645 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/2049463717744358 %X 1. This article aims to provide a long-term update 2£¿years on from our initial paper and summarises service evaluation data collected from 21 pain management programmes, using a solution-focused approach in a community pain service. 2. An examination of the larger baseline and subsequent follow-up data suggests an improvement in participants¡¯ function, pain self-efficacy and mental well-being following CPS PMP, and corroborates the findings of the earlier dataset. 3. Additional findings suggest that CPS PMP may help pain interfere less in participants¡¯ lives (post-PMP and at 10-week follow-up) and that improvements in mental well-being and self-efficacy are maintained on a long-term basis (at 6- and 12-month follow-up). Limitations of the data are discussed. 4. The article also discusses the nature of community healthcare services for chronic pain, including how we view PMP treatment intensity, deliver cost effectiveness, measure outcomes and support patients post-PMP. 5. It is suggested that effective, meaningful PMPs can be facilitated successfully by multi-professional teams in the community, at arguably lower cost than secondary/tertiary settings, while enabling convenient and long-lasting integration of self-management into people¡¯s lives %K Pain management programme %K solution focused %K community pain management %K pain self-efficacy %K well-being %K chronic pain %K function %K patient-centred care %K cost effectiveness %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2049463717744358