Advances in Chronic Pain
Chronic pain is classified as pain that lasts longer than three months. In medicine, the distinction between acute and chronic pain is sometimes determined by the amount of time since onset. Two commonly used markers are pain that continues at three months and six months since onset,but some theorists and researchers have placed the transition from acute to chronic pain at twelve months. Others apply the term acute to pain that lasts less than 30 days, chronic to pain of more than six months duration, and subacute to pain that lasts from one to six months. A popular alternative definition of chronic pain, involving no fixed duration, is "pain that extends beyond the expected period of healing".
Sample Chapter(s)
preface (53 KB)
Components of the Book:
  • Chapter 1
    Obstacles To Returning To Work With Chronic Pain: In-Depth Interviews With People Who Are Off Work Due To Chronic Pain And Employers
  • Chapter 2
    Chronic Pain As A Blind Spot In The Diagnosis Of A Depressed Society. On The Implications Of The Connection Between Depression And Chronic Pain For Interpretations Of Contemporary Society
  • Chapter 3
    A Protocol For Chronic Pain Outcome Measurement Enhancement By Linking Promis-29 Scale To Legacy Measures And Improving Chronic Pain Stratification
  • Chapter 4
    Chronic Pain Experience And Health Inequities During The Covid-19 Pandemic In Canada: Qualitative Findings From The Chronic Pain & Covid-19 Pan-Canadian Study
  • Chapter 5
    A Comparison Of The Influencing Factors Of Chronic Pain And Quality Of Life Between Older Koreans And Korean–Americans With Chronic Pain: A Correlational Study
  • Chapter 6
    Lipid Signatures Of Chronic Pain In Female Adolescents With And Without Obesity
  • Chapter 7
    Health Care Providers’ Experiences Of Pain Management And Attitudes Towards Digitally Supported Self-Management Interventions For Chronic Pain: A Qualitative Study
  • Chapter 8
    Chronic Pain Patients’ Need For Recognition And Their Current Struggle
  • Chapter 9
    The Association Between The Problem List And Chronic Pain Management
  • Chapter 10
    Predictors Of Veterans Health Administration Utilization And Pain Persistence Among Soldiers Treated For Postdeployment Chronic Pain In The Military Health System
Readership: Students, academics, teachers and other people attending or interested in Chronic Pain
Mary Grant
Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK

Dominik Koesling
Department of Medical Ethics at CAU Kiel, Kiel, Germany

Patricia M. Herman
RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, USA

Hee‑Soon Juon
Department of Medical Oncology, Thomas Jefferson University, Benjamin Franklin House, 834 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA

Tina L. Rylee
Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA, USA

and more...
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