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Pain - A Sociological Introduction
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Main description:

Pain in one form or another is probably the most common symptom presented to medical and healthcare professionals. Long a subject of biomedical interest, more recent biopsychosocial theories have extended the study of pain as a concept which is highly individual in the way it is experienced. Today s landscape offers a broad array of approaches to understanding pain and, crucially, to alleviating its impact. This concise and accessible volume aims to make sense of what is at first sight an eclectic mix of theoretical and practical work on pain, from a distinctly sociological perspective. While there has been much quantitative medical research on pain, in exploring sociology s important contributions to this field Elaine Denny offers insight into the world of those living with pain and the meaning it has in their lives. She provides readers with a range of explanations of pain and various influences on the experience of pain, critically analysing competing schools of thought and embedding this work in the everyday practice of providing care.
The result is an illuminating volume for students of health and medical professions studying pain, the body, and the sociology of health and illness.


Contents:

* Introduction * Chapter 1: Historical Perspectives on Pain * Chapter 2: Sociological Theory, Concepts and Pain * Chapter 3: The Experience of Pain * Chapter 4: Care and Care Services for Pain * Chapter 5: Structures of Diversity and Pain * Chapter 6: Pain as an Contested Experience * Chapter 7: Emotional Pain and Suffering * Chapter 8: Health Professionals Experience of Pain * Chapter 9 Conclusion * References * Index


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9780745655550
Publisher: Polity Press
Publication date: November, 2017
Pages: 208
Dimensions: 138.00 x 209.00 x 14.00
Weight: 262g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Anaesthetics and Pain, Diseases and Disorders, General Issues, General Practice

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