Literature DB >> 10220019

The power of the visible: the meaning of diagnostic tests in chronic back pain.

L A Rhodes1, C A McPhillips-Tangum, C Markham, R Klenk.   

Abstract

This article explores the meaning of diagnostic tests for people with chronic back pain. Lower back pain is one of the most common health problems in the US. Five to ten percent of the patients who visit a primary care provider for back pain ultimately develop a chronic condition. We draw on interviews with chronic back pain patients in Atlanta, Dallas and Seattle to argue that testing constitutes an important element in the legitimation of pain for these patients. We discuss three aspects that make testing an area of concern for patients: a strong historical connection between visual images and the medicalization of the interior of the body, a set of cultural assumptions that make seeing into the body central to confirming and normalizing patients' symptoms, and the concreteness of diagnostic images themselves. Our interviews show that when physicians cannot locate the problem or express doubt about the possibility of a solution, patients feel that their pain is disconfirmed. Faced with the disjunction between the cultural model of the visible body and the private experience of pain, patients are alienated not only from individual physicians but from an important aspect of the symbolic world of medicine. This paper concludes by suggesting that a fluid, less localized understanding of pain could provide a greater sense of legitimacy for back pain patients.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10220019     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00418-3

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


  30 in total

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2.  The catastrophization effects of an MRI report on the patient and surgeon and the benefits of 'clinical reporting': results from an RCT and blinded trials.

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Review 3.  Qualitative Methods to Advance Care, Diagnosis, and Therapy in Rheumatic Diseases.

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Review 4.  [Review of the literature on the psychoemotional reality of women with vulvodynia: difficulties met and strategies developed].

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5.  Investigating Trust, Expertise, and Epistemic Injustice in Chronic Pain.

Authors:  Daniel Z Buchman; Anita Ho; Daniel S Goldberg
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6.  Neural imaginaries and clinical epistemology: Rhetorically mapping the adolescent brain in the clinical encounter.

Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2014-04-13       Impact factor: 4.634

7.  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

8.  Is immediate imaging important in managing low back pain?

Authors:  J C Andersen
Journal:  J Athl Train       Date:  2011 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.860

9.  "Is there any way I can get something for my pain?" Patient strategies for requesting analgesics.

Authors:  Mara Buchbinder; Rachel Wilbur; Samuel McLean; Betsy Sleath
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2014-10-28

Review 10.  Overtreating chronic back pain: time to back off?

Authors:  Richard A Deyo; Sohail K Mirza; Judith A Turner; Brook I Martin
Journal:  J Am Board Fam Med       Date:  2009 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.657

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