Independent health and wellness reporting Thursday, June 25, 2026

Health / Back Pain & Sciatica

5 Things People Over 50 Are Using Instead of Pills for Back Pain and Sciatica

No miracle talk. Just the five options people over 50 are actually reaching for instead of pills, what each one is genuinely good at, and where each one falls short.

James Porter, DPT Medically reviewed by James Porter, DPT
Fact-checked
Man over 55 sitting on the edge of his bed with a hand on his lower back, pill bottles on the nightstand
If your back flares the moment you stand, bend or try to sleep, you know the routine. Illustration. Photo: provided.

Key takeaways

  • Most people over 50 are tired of leaning on pills and want to know what else actually works.
  • Every common option has a real trade-off: physical therapy is slow, pills and creams fade, prescriptions bring fog and a dependence risk.
  • A drug-free herbal patch sits in the middle: targeted like a cream but lasting up to 12 hours, with no pills and no fog.

If you are over 50 and your lower back or sciatica flares up the moment you stand, bend, or try to sleep, you already know the routine. Reach for a pill, wait, hope it does something, and start the clock again a few hours later.

You are not imagining how common this is. The CDC counts roughly 51.6 million American adults living with chronic pain, and back pain tends to peak right around the ages of 50 to 55.1 So if it feels like your body picked this decade to turn on you, the timing is not a coincidence.

Here is the part most people quietly relate to: a lot of us are tired of leaning on pills for it. A 2017 Gallup survey found that 78 percent of people would rather try other ways to address pain before reaching for medication.2 And the concern is fair. The CDC has reported that up to 1 in 4 people (26 percent) on long-term opioids in primary care end up struggling with dependence.3 That is not a reason to panic, but it is a reason a lot of people over 50 are looking around for what else is out there.

So we did the honest version of that search. Below are five things people over 50 are actually using instead of pills, what each one is genuinely good at, and where each one falls short. No miracle talk. Just the real trade-offs.

Woman over 50 sitting on the edge of her bed in the morning with one hand pressed to her lower back
Back pain tends to peak between the ages of 50 and 55. Illustration. Photo: provided.
1
Physical Therapy and Stretching

What it is: Guided exercises, manual therapy, and stretching routines designed to strengthen the muscles supporting your spine and improve how you move.

Man over 60 doing a guided back stretch with a physiotherapist
Physical therapy goes after the root cause, but the relief can fade between appointments. Photo: provided.
The honest proThis is the one option on the list that goes after the root cause instead of just the symptom. A good physical therapist can correct the movement patterns and weaknesses that keep your back flaring up, and the benefits can last well beyond the sessions. For a lot of people, this is the long-term foundation.
The honest conIt is slow, and it is not cheap. You are often looking at weeks or months before you feel a real shift, plus copays or out-of-pocket costs per visit. And the relief can fade between appointments. As one person put it, they did "physical therapy with ultrasound along with traction, but nothing managed the chronic pain I was suffering at night." When the day is over and you are lying in bed, the clinic is closed and you are on your own.
2
Over-the-Counter Pills

What it is: Ibuprofen, naproxen, acetaminophen, and the rest of the drugstore aisle. The default first move for most people.

Older hand tipping OTC pain pills from a bottle into a palm
Over-the-counter pills are cheap and everywhere, but often do not reach deep nerve pain. Photo: provided.
The honest proThey are cheap, everywhere, and convenient. For mild, occasional aches they can take the edge off without much fuss, and almost everyone already has a bottle in the cabinet.
The honest conFor deeper nerve and sciatic pain, a lot of people find they just do not reach it. One person described OTC pills as offering "virtually no relief for sciatic pain," and another said plainly, "Taking OTC pain relief pills just doesn't work, it's really deep bone pain." On top of that, they work from the inside out and pass through your whole system, so regular use can be hard on the stomach. Convenient is not the same as effective.
3
Topical Creams and Gels

What it is: Menthol or herbal rubs you massage directly onto the sore area for a warming or cooling sensation.

Older person squeezing pain relief gel from a tube onto fingers
Creams go right to the spot, but the relief tends to be short. Photo: provided.
The honest proThey go straight to the spot that hurts instead of circulating through your body, which a lot of people prefer. The warming or cooling feeling can be genuinely soothing, and you can reapply whenever you want.
The honest conThe relief tends to be short. As one user said, a cream "works for about five minutes, then stops," which means you are rubbing it on again and again. The stronger ones can also leave a heavy medicinal smell that lingers on your skin and clothes, which is not ideal if you are heading out the door.
4
Prescription Medications (Gabapentin, Opioids)

What it is: Stronger, doctor-prescribed drugs for nerve pain and severe pain, including gabapentin and opioid painkillers.

Amber prescription pill bottles on a nightstand with a groggy man behind them
Prescriptions are powerful but bring fog, grogginess and a real dependence risk. Photo: provided.
The honest proWhen pain is severe, these are powerful, and for some people they are necessary. Under proper medical supervision they can manage pain levels that nothing on the drugstore shelf will touch.
The honest conThey come with real weight. Many people describe mental fog, grogginess, and feeling not quite like themselves. Sometimes the relief does not even arrive: one person said they took "1,000 mg of Gabapentin for two weeks and no change," and another admitted they had "been taking Motrin and gabapentin for way too long." And the dependence risk is real, the CDC has reported up to 1 in 4 long-term opioid users in primary care end up struggling with dependence. These are serious tools that deserve a serious conversation with your doctor, not a casual daily habit.
5
Herbal Patches (Revoget)

What it is: A drug-free adhesive patch you place directly on the spot that hurts. Revoget's Herbal Patches use a blend of real botanicals, Ginger Root Extract (gingerols, with anti-inflammatory properties that have been studied),4 Artemisia Extract (mugwort, used in East Asian tradition for warmth and circulation), Black Pepper Extract (piperine, which helps the other ingredients absorb through the skin), along with Safflower and Atractylodes.

The honest proThis is the targeted, drug-free middle ground a lot of people over 50 have been looking for. Like a cream, it goes right where it hurts instead of through your whole system, but instead of fading in five minutes it is designed to keep working for up to 12 hours. Most people feel relief within 15 to 20 minutes. There is no pill to swallow, no mental fog, no stomach upset, and nothing that builds dependence. It is 100% natural, helps reduce inflammation and stiffness, and the herbal formula has been clinically tested. Revoget has served more than 80,000 customers, and 92% reported positive results after 30 days.
The honest conIt is topical, so it is best suited for targeted back and sciatic pain rather than full-body or whole-system issues, and like anything adhesive, fit and placement matter. It is also not a pill you already have in the cabinet, so it is one more thing to keep on hand.

What people actually say about it is the most convincing part:

"Within a half hour, I'm pain-free."
"I was honestly shocked at the response my body had to these. Best night's sleep."

For the person who got "no relief" from OTC pills, found that creams quit after five minutes, and does not want the fog of prescriptions, a targeted patch is often the option that finally fits.

Get 12-Hour Targeted Relief - Shop Revoget Patches
Green Revoget Herbal Patches box on a wooden table with one unwrapped herbal patch in front and a hand peeling the backing off a second patch
Revoget Herbal Patches use ginger, artemisia and black pepper, placed right on the spot. Photo: Revoget.

So which one wins?

Honestly, it depends on you.

If you want to fix the root cause and you have the time and budget, physical therapy is hard to beat. If your pain is mild and occasional, an OTC pill might be all you need. If your pain is severe, prescriptions have their place, with your doctor in the loop.

But if you are part of the large group over 50 who wants targeted relief without swallowing anything, without the fog, and without the dependence worry, this is exactly where herbal patches have become the quiet favorite. They sit in the sweet spot a lot of the other options miss: local like a cream, but lasting, drug-free, and made from real botanicals.

The best option is the one that fits your life and actually gives you your day, and your night, back.

Relaxed smiling man around 60 standing at ease outdoors mid-stretch, comfortable and mobile
The best option is the one that gives you your day, and your night, back. Photo: provided.

Ready to try the targeted, drug-free option?

Revoget Herbal Patches go right where it hurts, start working in 15 to 20 minutes, and last up to 12 hours, no pills, no fog, no dependence. Join the 80,000+ people who have already made the switch.

Every order is backed by a 60-day money-back guarantee.

Try the patches, sleep through the night, move through your day, and if they are not for you, send them back for a full refund.

Try Revoget Herbal Patches, Risk-Free for 60 Days

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Results may vary from person to person. Customer quotes reflect individual experiences and are not a guarantee of specific results. If you have a medical condition or are taking medication, consult your healthcare provider before use.

Sources and References (4)
  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Chronic Pain Among Adults, United States." MMWR, 2023.
  2. Gallup. "Annual Survey on Pain and Care." 2017.
  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain." 2016.
  4. Daily JW, et al. "Efficacy of ginger for relieving pain and inflammation." Journal of Pain Research, 2015.
Comments are from Revoget customers. Some names and photos have been changed for privacy. Individual results vary.
1,612 Comments
Most relevant ▾
RM
Reggie Marsh
gabapentin did NOTHING for me and i feel seen by this list. doc had me on 1000mg for two weeks, all it did was make me foggy and forget where i put my glasses, leg pain was exactly the same. came off it cause i didnt like where that road was headed, you hear stories. powerful my foot
LO
Lillian Bishop
the dependence thing scared me too. my sister couldnt get off hers. glad you walked away
BC
Brenda Hartley
ok the part about creams quitting after 5 min is SO true, i got a whole drawer of them, the menthol ones, the cbd ones, the horse liniment my brother swears by... they all do the same thing, smell like a hospital for ten minutes then nothing. my back doesnt care about any of em
Dale Whitmer
Dale Whitmer
im gonna defend PT a little here cause everybody trashes it. it DID help me, the stretches are real and it goes after the actual cause unlike a pill. BUT they nailed the problem in this article, its slow and its 60 bucks a pop after insurance and the minute you stop going it creeps right back. by 2am my leg is on fire again and theres no therapist at 2am. thats the gap nobody fixes
CP
Carol Ann Petrie
this is me exactly. the night part. PT helps during the day then the sciatica wakes me up anyway
TR
Tom Reaves
whats not said enough here is the SLEEP. i dont even care which option wins, i care about not getting woke up at 3am with my leg screaming. pills knock you out but you wake up groggy and stupid, the cream is gone by midnight. if something targeted actually holds the whole night thats the only review that matters to me
Wendell Pryce
Wendell Pryce
trying to look at this like the article does, just the tradeoffs. ibuprofen is cheap and i can get it anywhere so thats the plus, but its never once touched the deep nerve pain down the leg, and my stomach lining is paying rent for nothing. creams hit the right spot but quit in five min. the patch is the only one here that claims spot treatment AND lasts, 12 hrs vs 5 min is the actual comparison that matters to me. so on paper it pencils out. on paper. id want to feel it before i call it
SB
Sandra Bui
im still on the fence with the patch part if im honest. ginger and black pepper sounds nice and 12 hours is a big claim next to a cream but ive been burned by stuff that promised the moon before. the 60 day guarantee is the only reason im even considering it, means i can actually test it on my own sciatica and send it back if its another drawer item. havent pulled the trigger yet
PS
Pat Sliwinski
ok dumb question for the group, if you were starting over which of these would you actually try FIRST. im not made of money and i dont want to go down the prescription road. genuinely asking
Maureen Haskell
Maureen Haskell
not a dumb question at all. my ranking after going thru all of em, ill be honest. skip the prescription road like you said, the fog isnt worth it. PT if you got the time and money cause it does fix the cause, but if you want something for the actual spot that dont quit in 5 min i put the patch ahead of the creams. thats just me, 30 yrs of a bad back talking not a doctor
GL
Gary Lindqvist
id say cheapest first honestly. otc for a week, if it dont reach the leg pain like it never does for me then move to the targeted stuff. dont skip steps
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