Let me show you what fixing sciatica the conventional way REALLY costs in Britain:
The GP Route: Repeat prescriptions. Co-codamol, naproxen, gabapentin. Cost: ongoing. Outcome: dependency, not recovery.
The Pain Clinic Route: Private consultation: £250–350 MRI scan: £500–800 Cortisone injections: £400–600 each — you'll need several, and they stop working Total for 6 months:
£3,000–5,000 For temporary relief that shortens every time.
The Surgery Route: Microdiscectomy: £8,000–20,000 privately 6–12 weeks recovery 30-40% chance it doesn't fully work 25% chance you're worse after Total: your savings and a dice roll on your spine
The medical industry LOVES these options.
Know why?
Because you keep coming back.
More appointments = more revenue. Failed surgery = more surgery. Temporary relief = lifetime patient.
It's a goldmine built on human suffering.
But here's what really pisses them off...
The Pharinity NeuroFlex™ Belt should cost £500.
That's what comparable clinical-grade decompression devices sell for in specialist settings.
But I didn't work with Pharinity to make money.
I did it because I watched my wife sob on a bathroom floor.
Because Dave the builder was one prescription away from dependency.
Because Dorothy was about to let some knife-happy consultant dice up her spine at 71.
So here's the deal:
The regular price is £199.
Already less than a single private consultation.
But that's not what you'll pay today.