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19


Psychological Pain : Metaphor or Reality?

Chapter by: Biro, David
in: Pain and emotion in modern history by Boddice, Rob (Ed)
Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2014
pp. 53-65
ISBN: 1137372427
CID: 4194562

When language runs dry : pain, the imagination, and metaphor

Chapter by: Biro, David
in: Dimensions of pain : humanities and social science perspectives by Käll, Lisa Folkmarson (Ed)
Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2013
pp. 13-25
ISBN: 0203087380
CID: 4194572

An anatomy of illness

Biro, David
Because it focuses primarily on the sick body (disease), medicine ignores many of the concerns and needs of sick people. By listening to the stories of patients in the clinic, on the Internet, and in published book form, health care providers could gain a better understanding of the impact of disease on the person (illness), what it means to patients over and above their physical symptoms and what they might require over and above surgery or chemotherapy. Only by familiarizing themselves with the entire emotional landscape of illness, which includes fear, anger, shame, guilt, and above all loneliness, can the healthy--medicine as well as society in general--hope to heal in a comprehensive manner.
PMID: 22113404
ISSN: 1573-3645
CID: 1896942

Listening to pain : finding words, compassion, and relief

Biro, David
New York : W.W. Norton & Co., 2011
Extent: 256 p. ; 21 cm
ISBN: 0393340252
CID: 4194552

Redefining pain

Biro, David
PMID: 21352623
ISSN: 1478-9523
CID: 1896952

[S.l.] : FiveBooks.com, 2010

The best books on pain recommended by David Biro

Biro, David
(Website)
CID: 4194642

Book Review : Lous Heshusius, Inside Chronic Pain : an intimate and critcal account. Cornell Univ Press, 2009; 167 pp: 978080149 [Book Review]

Biro, David
ORIGINAL:0014455
ISSN: 1363-4593
CID: 4194622

The language of pain : finding words, compassion, and relief

Biro, David
New York : W.W. Norton, 2010
Extent: 256 p. ; 22 cm
ISBN: 0393070638
CID: 4194532

Doctor, my pain is like a red, red rose: Choose your words carefully when describing pain to your GP -- it could make all the difference, says David Biro [Newspaper Article]

Biro, David
The first question your doctor will ask is where does it hurt. That's an easy one. It's the next question that usually creates the difficulties and often leaves patients tongue-tied: now can you describe the pain? Describe what? Although we can usually figure out where it's coming from, pain is very much inside of us, even when there is a visible injury on the body's surface. We can't see pain, touch it, hear it. So how can we possibly paint a picture of what is inaccessible to our senses, for pain -- as Emily Dickinson, the American poet, once said -- "has an element of blank". Ephrem Fernandez, a psychologist, and his colleagues at the University of Texas who study the language of pain, are finding that metaphorical descriptors often provide invaluable clues that point to one cause of pain over another. Bone cancer pain such as [Peter]'s tends to feel "sharp" and "stabbing" in nature. Musculoskeletal back pain, on the other hand -- the kind that might be triggered by an injury at the gym--tends to be more "aching" and "gnawing". Similarly, a headache that is "throbbing" is more likely to be because of migraine while a "dull, constant pain" is more typical of a tension headache. Medicine has also not been very successful at dealing with chronic pain, defined as pain that lasts longer than six months. Nearly eight million people in the UK suffer chronic conditions such as lower back pain and fibromyalgia and the number keeps growing. Many of these patients trudge from doctor to doctor without ever finding relief. Some will lose their jobs and become clinically depressed. Clearly this is tragic for the sufferers, but it also affects the country as a whole, through increasing health care costs and the growth in the numbers of disabled people. Pain experts consistently point to three major reasons for medicine's failing: primary care doctors being poorly educated in pain management, disproportionately low funding for pain research (compared with cancer or Aids research), and a lack of access to pain medications and specialists
PROQUEST:748331947
ISSN: 0140-0460
CID: 4194592

What health care reform forgot : Patients often get scant consideration, as one doctor learned from his [Newspaper Article]

Biro, David
ORIGINAL:0014454
ISSN: 0885-6613
CID: 4194612