The Hidden Struggle: How Doctors Talk About Invisible Chronic Pain

Fri Jan 10 2025
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For a long time, doctors have relied on finding physical damage to understand and treat pain. But chronic pain is different. It often doesn't show up on scans or tests, and it's a personal experience that no one else can feel. This makes it tough for doctors to talk about with their patients. This paper looks at how doctors and patients describe chronic pain as something you can't see. Pain is something we feel inside, not something others can see. This makes it hard to explain to doctors. Doctors usually look for signs of injury to figure out what's wrong, but with chronic pain, there might not be any visible damage. This can make it challenging for doctors to understand what their patients are going through. In pain clinic consultations and interviews, patients might struggle to put their pain into words. Doctors, on the other hand, might focus more on what they can see and measure, like a patient's movements or their responses to treatments. This can lead to a gap in understanding, where patients feel like their pain isn't being taken seriously. It's not that doctors don't care, but the way they're trained to think about pain can make it hard for them to grasp something they can't see or test for. This is a big challenge in how doctors and patients communicate about chronic pain.
https://localnews.ai/article/the-hidden-struggle-how-doctors-talk-about-invisible-chronic-pain-1551a96f

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