Highly recommended: General readers, lower-division undergraduates, and two-year technical students.
Choice
The Right to Pain Relief and Other Deep Roots of the Opioid Epidemic offers a new lens through which to view the opioid epidemic as a consequence of serious misunderstandings of both opioids and pain. Based on their extensive research and experience with chronic pain care, science, ethics, and policy, the authors look beyond the usual villains-pharmaceutical companies and pharmacotherapy distributors-to examine the ethical and scientific concepts about pain that made the opioid epidemic possible.
The book explores the history of pain in Western society, the role of innovation in end-of-life care, the conception of pain control as an important medical responsibility, and the various models of pain that have led to our current understanding of it, ultimately arguing that we must reintegrate pain with the rest of human suffering as a necessary part of a full life. Containing patient vignettes as well as scientific and policy controversies that have emerged as the opioid epidemic has evolved, The Right to Pain Relief and Other Deep Roots of the Opioid Epidemic examines these implications in a more human and holistic way than has been ever addressed before by the popular press and professional literature.
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Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. The problems of pain in Western Society
Chapter 2. The medical dream of conquering pain
Chapter 3. The emergence of a right to pain relief: A change in the meaning of pain
Chapter 4. Chronic pain as a disease
Chapter 5. Looking beyond a biopsychosocial model of pain
Chapter 6. Pain medicine and the medicalization of chronic pain
Chapter 7. Selling opioids as targeted painkillers
Chapter 8. From causal to moral models of pain and the right to pain relief
Chapter 9. Finding a place for pain in medicine, in policy, and in life
Chapter 10. Clinician's perspective: Dr. Clark's tale
Chapter 11. Patient's perspective: My name is Reggie Winston
Index
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Highly recommended: General readers, lower-division undergraduates, and two-year technical students.
"Highly recommended: General readers, lower-division undergraduates, and two-year technical students." -- Choice
Mark D. Sullivan, MD, PhD, is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences as well as Adjunct Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine and Adjunct Professor of Bioethics and Humanities at the University of Washington.
Jane C. Ballantyne, MD, FRCA, is board certified anesthesiologist at UW Medical Center and a UW professor (retired) of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine and Director of the UW Pain Fellowship.
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Selling point: Reaches beneath the "greedy pharma" narrative prevalent in the popular press to examine professional concepts and attitudes about pain that made the opioid epidemic possible
Selling point: Written by clinician-researchers who have treated patients with chronic pain and researched opioid treatment of chronic pain for decades
Selling point: Provides historical perspective on the problems of pain in Western culture and modern biomedicine
Selling point: Identifies specific steps that should be taken to avoid a future opioid epidemic
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197615720
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
358 gr
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
139 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
304