The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking

Patients with pain often feel that their suffering is taken lightly, dismissed or denied. Before the introduction of anesthesia, pain was regarded as an awful affliction. This view diminished somewhat once anesthesia became available, although it still holds true for some forms of pain, eg, pain ass...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Harold Merskey, Robert W Teasell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2000-01-01
Series:Pain Research and Management
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2000/565309
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832566878236573696
author Harold Merskey
Robert W Teasell
author_facet Harold Merskey
Robert W Teasell
author_sort Harold Merskey
collection DOAJ
description Patients with pain often feel that their suffering is taken lightly, dismissed or denied. Before the introduction of anesthesia, pain was regarded as an awful affliction. This view diminished somewhat once anesthesia became available, although it still holds true for some forms of pain, eg, pain associated with terminal cancer. Pain was then treated as less troublesome when it became a reason for disability compensation to be paid. Examples are given of the disparagement of complaints by individuals reporting pain in the past 150 years. Factors that encourage doctors to underestimate patients' pain include the requirement for doctors to control the issue of narcotics; circumstances in which patients may benefit from compensation by claiming that their pain is great; and the development of attitudes that understate the importance of the relief of pain and overstate the importance of activity, exercise and not complaining. Current attitudes in this respect are associated with the insurance industry, but it has been shown that, even patients who do not have a compensable injury or have pain that is not disabling fail to receive the treatment for pain that is appropriate, eg, postoperatively. The present paper reviews and discusses these problems and suggests that disparagement of pain and disability in the medicolegal field also leads to the rejection of pain in other contexts.
format Article
id doaj-art-10f0b9d7ea3a4feaa6995325ab53e992
institution Kabale University
issn 1203-6765
language English
publishDate 2000-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Pain Research and Management
spelling doaj-art-10f0b9d7ea3a4feaa6995325ab53e9922025-02-03T01:02:56ZengWileyPain Research and Management1203-67652000-01-015425927010.1155/2000/565309The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical ThinkingHarold Merskey0Robert W Teasell1Department of Psychiatry, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, CanadaDepartment Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, CanadaPatients with pain often feel that their suffering is taken lightly, dismissed or denied. Before the introduction of anesthesia, pain was regarded as an awful affliction. This view diminished somewhat once anesthesia became available, although it still holds true for some forms of pain, eg, pain associated with terminal cancer. Pain was then treated as less troublesome when it became a reason for disability compensation to be paid. Examples are given of the disparagement of complaints by individuals reporting pain in the past 150 years. Factors that encourage doctors to underestimate patients' pain include the requirement for doctors to control the issue of narcotics; circumstances in which patients may benefit from compensation by claiming that their pain is great; and the development of attitudes that understate the importance of the relief of pain and overstate the importance of activity, exercise and not complaining. Current attitudes in this respect are associated with the insurance industry, but it has been shown that, even patients who do not have a compensable injury or have pain that is not disabling fail to receive the treatment for pain that is appropriate, eg, postoperatively. The present paper reviews and discusses these problems and suggests that disparagement of pain and disability in the medicolegal field also leads to the rejection of pain in other contexts.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2000/565309
spellingShingle Harold Merskey
Robert W Teasell
The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking
Pain Research and Management
title The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking
title_full The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking
title_fullStr The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking
title_full_unstemmed The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking
title_short The Disparagement of Pain: Social Influences on Medical Thinking
title_sort disparagement of pain social influences on medical thinking
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2000/565309
work_keys_str_mv AT haroldmerskey thedisparagementofpainsocialinfluencesonmedicalthinking
AT robertwteasell thedisparagementofpainsocialinfluencesonmedicalthinking
AT haroldmerskey disparagementofpainsocialinfluencesonmedicalthinking
AT robertwteasell disparagementofpainsocialinfluencesonmedicalthinking