Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"

John F Peppin,1 Michael E Schatman2 1Center for Bioethics, Pain Management and Medicine, St Louis, MO, 2US Pain Foundation, Middletown, CT, USAPain medicine as a separate subspecialty is in its infancy, only fairly recently being recognized as such by the American Board of Medical Specialities.1 As...

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Main Authors: Peppin JF, Schatman ME
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2016-01-01
Series:Journal of Pain Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/terminology-of-chronic-pain-the-need-to-quotlevel-the-playing-fieldquo-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
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spelling doaj-839ba74733874eb79aadf52a8019ecc52020-11-25T00:24:54ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Pain Research1178-70902016-01-012016Issue 1232425382Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"Peppin JFSchatman MEJohn F Peppin,1 Michael E Schatman2 1Center for Bioethics, Pain Management and Medicine, St Louis, MO, 2US Pain Foundation, Middletown, CT, USAPain medicine as a separate subspecialty is in its infancy, only fairly recently being recognized as such by the American Board of Medical Specialities.1 As it continues to find its way in the ever-changing world of medicine, terminology becomes an important consideration. Terms carry tremendous impact: for example, when a patient is told he or she has “cancer”, the impact emotionally will undoubtedly make further explanation difficult. To patients and their families, the word “cancer” has the effect of being hit with an emotional baseball bat. In the pain world, there was a recent, albeit failed, attempt to change the name of pain specialists to “algiatrists”.2 It was thought this would help define what such specialists did as opposed to other specialties. Accordingly, terminology matters, yet little attention has been paid to the terms we use to categorize and diagnose our patients. “Chronic cancer pain” and “chronic noncancer pain” are replete in the literature; however, the distinction here is actually obscure. A patient with pain from a cancer etiology has no different physiology than a patient with pain of noncancer etiologies.https://www.dovepress.com/terminology-of-chronic-pain-the-need-to-quotlevel-the-playing-fieldquo-peer-reviewed-article-JPRTerminologylanguagetaxonomypaincancernoncancer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peppin JF
Schatman ME
spellingShingle Peppin JF
Schatman ME
Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
Journal of Pain Research
Terminology
language
taxonomy
pain
cancer
noncancer
author_facet Peppin JF
Schatman ME
author_sort Peppin JF
title Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
title_short Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
title_full Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
title_fullStr Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
title_full_unstemmed Terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
title_sort terminology of chronic pain: the need to "level the playing field"
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Journal of Pain Research
issn 1178-7090
publishDate 2016-01-01
description John F Peppin,1 Michael E Schatman2 1Center for Bioethics, Pain Management and Medicine, St Louis, MO, 2US Pain Foundation, Middletown, CT, USAPain medicine as a separate subspecialty is in its infancy, only fairly recently being recognized as such by the American Board of Medical Specialities.1 As it continues to find its way in the ever-changing world of medicine, terminology becomes an important consideration. Terms carry tremendous impact: for example, when a patient is told he or she has “cancer”, the impact emotionally will undoubtedly make further explanation difficult. To patients and their families, the word “cancer” has the effect of being hit with an emotional baseball bat. In the pain world, there was a recent, albeit failed, attempt to change the name of pain specialists to “algiatrists”.2 It was thought this would help define what such specialists did as opposed to other specialties. Accordingly, terminology matters, yet little attention has been paid to the terms we use to categorize and diagnose our patients. “Chronic cancer pain” and “chronic noncancer pain” are replete in the literature; however, the distinction here is actually obscure. A patient with pain from a cancer etiology has no different physiology than a patient with pain of noncancer etiologies.
topic Terminology
language
taxonomy
pain
cancer
noncancer
url https://www.dovepress.com/terminology-of-chronic-pain-the-need-to-quotlevel-the-playing-fieldquo-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
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