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Camp Pain Talking With Chronic Pain Patients Unknown - 1999 - 1st Edition

by Jean E. Jackson


From the publisher

Pain is the most frequent cause of disability in America. And pain specialists estimate that as many as thirty to sixty million Americans suffer from chronic pain. Chronic pain is a complex phenomenon--often extremely difficult to treat, and surprisingly difficult to define.

Just as medical literature in general neglects the experience of illness, so the clinical literature on pain neglects the experience of pain. Camp Pain takes an approach different from most studies of chronic pain, which are typically written from a medical or social perspective. Based on a year's fieldwork in a pain treatment center, this book focuses on patients' perspectives--on their experiences of pain, what these experiences mean to them, and how this meaning is socially constructed.

Jackson explores the psychological burden imposed on many sufferers when they are judged not to have real pain, and by harsh moral judgments that sufferers are weak, malingering, or responsible in some way for their pain. Jackson also looks at the ways in which severe pain erodes and destroys personal identity, studying in particular the role of language.

While keeping her focus on patients' experiences, Jackson explores Western concepts of disease, health, mind, and body; assumptions about cause and effect; and notions of shame, guilt, and stigma. Camp Pain does not attempt to resolve the uncertainties and misperceptions associated with pain but rather aims at enhancing our understanding of the wider implications of chronic pain by focusing on the sufferers themselves.

First line

Teresa, a sculptor and body building instructor, had begun having severe back pain after a motorcycle accident fourteen years previously.

Details

  • Title Camp Pain Talking With Chronic Pain Patients
  • Author Jean E. Jackson
  • Binding unknown
  • Edition number 1st
  • Edition 1
  • Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Date November 1999
  • ISBN 9780812235265

About the author

Jean E. Jackson is Professor of Anthropology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is the author of The Fish People: Linguistic Exogamy and Tukanoan Identity in Northwest Amazonia.
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Camp Pain : Talking with Chronic Pain Patients

by Jackson, Jean E

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ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780812235265 / 0812235266
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Camp Pain": Talking with Chronic Pain Patients

by Jackson, Jean E

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ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
9780812235265 / 0812235266
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This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
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University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000-01-02. Hardcover. Good. Ex-library book with typical stickers and stampings. The RF tag was removed and has taken some paper with it inside of the back cover. Priority Mail is available on this item. No international shipping.
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$48.31
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