What is neck pain?
Neck pain is extremely common — about 1 in 3 adults each year. Most cases are mechanical (muscle strain, poor posture, sleeping awkwardly, prolonged screen use) and resolve in days to weeks.
Persistent, severe, or neurologic symptoms warrant further evaluation. Conservative treatment is effective for most.
Do I have neck pain? Common signs
If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth may be a good next step:
What causes it
Muscle strain, poor posture, prolonged computer/phone use, sleeping awkwardly, whiplash, herniated cervical disc, arthritis, stress-related muscle tension.
Is it contagious?
No.
Tech neck — looking down at phones — has dramatically increased neck pain in young adults. Posture matters more than people realize.
Can it be treated online?
Routine neck pain is well-suited to telehealth. Red flags requiring in-person evaluation: significant trauma, fever with neck pain, severe headache with stiff neck (possible meningitis), progressive arm weakness or numbness, loss of bowel/bladder control, history of cancer.
How neck pain is treated
NSAIDs — ibuprofen, naproxen. Muscle relaxants short-term (cyclobenzaprine). Heat or ice. Stretching and gentle neck exercises. Physical therapy for persistent issues. Ergonomic adjustments — monitor at eye level, lumbar support. Imaging only for red flags or persistent neurologic symptoms.
Self-care while you wait
- Monitor at eye level
- Phone at eye level when possible (not looking down)
- Lumbar support when sitting
- Stretch breaks every 30 min during desk work
- Gentle neck stretches and rotations
- Heat for chronic, ice for acute injury
- Supportive pillow — not too high
- Sleep on back or side, not stomach
- Stress management — clenched necks worsen pain
How long does it last?
Most acute neck pain resolves in 1–2 weeks. Chronic neck pain affects ~20% — needs structured management.
Frequently asked questions
Should I get an MRI?
Most acute neck pain doesn't need imaging. Red flags or persistent symptoms warrant imaging.
Will a cervical collar help?
Brief use for severe acute injury maybe; otherwise prolonged use weakens neck muscles. Avoid in mechanical pain.
Is cracking my neck dangerous?
Self-manipulation rarely causes serious harm but can over time. Chiropractic forceful manipulation has rare but real cervical artery dissection risk.
Will stretches help acute pain?
Gentle stretches yes; aggressive stretching can worsen. Start gently and progress.
How can I prevent it?
Posture, screen ergonomics, regular movement, neck strengthening exercises, stress management.


