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Produktdetails

Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen
2023
Sprache
English
Seiten
156
Infos
156 Seiten
235 mm x 155 mm
ISBN
978-3-030-95827-5

Hauptbeschreibung



This book, the third and final volume in the
Meaning of Pain
series, describes what pain means to people with pain in “vulnerable” groups, and how meaning changes pain – and them – over time.


Immediate pain warns of harm or injury to the person with pain. If pain persists over time, more complex meanings can become interwoven with this primitive meaning of threat. These cognitive meanings include thoughts and anxiety about the adverse consequences of pain. Such meanings can nourish existential sufferings, which are more about the person than the pain, such as loss, loneliness, or despair.


Although chronic pain can affect anyone, there are some groups of people for whom particular clinical support and understanding is urgently needed. This applies to “vulnerable” or “special” groups of people, and to the question of what pain means to them. These groups include children, women, older adults, veterans, addicts, people with mental health problems, homeless people, or people in rural or indigenous communities. Several chapters in the book focus on the lived experience of pain in vulnerable adults, including black older adults in the US, rural Nigerians, US veterans, and adults with acquired brain injury. The question of what pain experience could mean in the defenceless fetus, neonate, pre-term baby, and child, is examined in depth across three contributions.


This book series aspires to create a vocabulary on the “meanings of pain” and a clinical framework with which to use it. It is hoped that the series stimulates self-reflection about the role of meaning in optimal pain management.




Meanings of Pain
is intended for people with pain, family members or caregivers of people with pain, clinicians, researchers, advocates, and policy makers. Volume I was published in 2016; Volume II in 2019.



Inhaltsverzeichnis



Chapter 1. Conceptualising Pain in Critically-Ill Neonates or Infants.- Chapter 2. Pain in the Fetus and the Preterm Baby.- Chapter 3. Developmental Influences on the Meanings of Pain in

Children.- Chapter 4. “Ooh, You Got to Holler Sometime:” Pain Meaning and Experiences of Black Older Adults.- Chapter 5. Exploring the Meaning of Chronic Low Back Pain as a Life of ‘Living Death’ in Rural Nigeria.- Chapter 6.
Painworld
: A Phenomenological View of Veteran Experiences of Living with Chronic

Pain.- Chapter 7. “It’s Just One of Them Things You’ve Got to Try and Manage”: Meanings of Pain for People with Brain Injury.



Klappentext



This book, the third and final volume in the 
Meaning of Pain
 series, describes what pain means to people with pain in “vulnerable” groups, and how meaning changes pain – and them – over time.


Immediate pain warns of harm or injury to the person with pain. If pain persists over time, more complex meanings can become interwoven with this primitive meaning of threat. These cognitive meanings include thoughts and anxiety about the adverse consequences of pain. Such meanings can nourish existential sufferings, which are more about the person than the pain, such as loss, loneliness, or despair.


Although chronic pain can affect anyone, there are some groups of people for whom particular clinical support and understanding is urgently needed. This applies to “vulnerable” or “special” groups of people, and to the question of what pain means to them. These groups include children, women, older adults, veterans, addicts, people with mental health problems, homelesspeople, or people in rural or indigenous communities. Several chapters in the book focus on the lived experience of pain in vulnerable adults, including black older adults in the US, rural Nigerians, US veterans, and adults with acquired brain injury. The question of what pain experience could mean in the defenceless fetus, neonate, pre-term baby, and child, is examined in depth across three contributions.



This book series aspires to create a vocabulary on the “meanings of pain” and a clinical framework with which to use it. It is hoped that the series stimulates self-reflection about the role of meaning in optimal pain management.




Meanings of Pain
 is intended for people with pain, family members or caregivers of people with pain, clinicians, researchers, advocates, and policy makers. Volume I was published in 2016; Volume II in 2019.


Über den AutorIn

Simon van Rysewyk is Associate Director (Medical Writing) at EPG Health, a specialist in digital medical education, and an Adjunct Researcher in the Department of Philosophy and Gender Studies, School of Humanities, University of Tasmania. He received his PhD in Philosophy from the University of Tasmania in 2013. His interests are pain, meaning, experience, and consciousness.

He is coeditor of the 2015 Springer title “Machine Medical Ethics,” Vol. 74, in the series “Intelligent Systems, Control and Automation: Science and Engineering,” ISBN 978-3-319-08108-3. He edited the 2016 and 2019 contributed volumes “Meanings of Pain,” the first two books in a three-volume series published by Springer.