Literature DB >> 10075177

Medical knowledge and the intractable patient: the case of chronic low back pain.

C May1, H Doyle, C Chew-Graham.   

Abstract

Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is endemic in Western societies, and while a good deal of attention has been paid to the lay experience of such pain, much less sociological attention has been paid to the way in which medical ideas about it have been formulated. This paper takes the latter course, tracing the development of clinical notions about the relationship between pathological signs and expressed symptoms from the 1820's to the 1930's, and then placing these developments in the context of postwar notions of 'somatization'. We point to the extent to which the disparity between expressed symptoms, pathological signs and perceived disability in CLBP has led to the moral character of the sufferer forming a constant subtext to medical discourse about the condition. We also note the extent to which medical ideas themselves have been constructed in intimate linkage with socio-legal questions of compensation and worker's insurance.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10075177     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00372-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  5 in total

1.  Is life becoming more of a pain?

Authors:  P Croft
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-06-10

2.  Evaluating health-care: the perspectives of sufferers with upper limb pain.

Authors:  M Calnan; D Wainwright; C O'Neill; A Winterbottom; C Watkins
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 3.377

3.  "Disturbing phenomenology" in the pain and engagement narratives of Cambodian American survivors of the Killing Fields.

Authors:  Edwina S Uehara
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2007-09

4.  Involving users in low back pain research.

Authors:  Bie Nio Ong; Helen Hooper
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 3.377

5.  Biopsychosocial care and the physiotherapy encounter: physiotherapists' accounts of back pain consultations.

Authors:  Tom Sanders; Nadine E Foster; Annette Bishop; Bie Nio Ong
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2013-02-19       Impact factor: 2.362

  5 in total

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