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Why We Hurt - by  Nathaniel Frank (Hardcover) - 1 of 1

Why We Hurt - by Nathaniel Frank Hardcover

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Highlights

  • More than 50 million Americans, and billions worldwide, suffer from chronic pain, including back pain and migraines (the two most debilitating health conditions in the world), knee and hip pain, sciatica, fibromyalgia, gastrointestinal disorders, and more.
  • About the Author: Dr. Nathaniel Frank is an award-winning author, historian, journalist, and strategist who is internationally respected for his deployment of academic research to effect meaningful social, political, and personal change.
  • 256 Pages
  • Health + Wellness, Pain Management

Description



About the Book



An accessible, story-driven book that explains the fundamentals of the mind-body pain revolution and describes the wealth of scientific evidence validating the belief that most chronic pain is brain-based instead of physical.



Book Synopsis



More than 50 million Americans, and billions worldwide, suffer from chronic pain, including back pain and migraines (the two most debilitating health conditions in the world), knee and hip pain, sciatica, fibromyalgia, gastrointestinal disorders, and more. Unexplained persistent pain is a growing epidemic that costs Americans more than $500 billion a year in healthcare and disability costs and lost productivity. It's the most common reason for doctor and hospital visits. Yet maddeningly, doctors often have no idea how to treat chronic pain patients, and often dismiss them as having nothing wrong, a problem that disproportionately affects women and people of color. About half a million Americans have died over the past two decades after overdosing on opioids, commonly taken in a desperate quest for pain relief.
Fortunately, a kernel of hope--and a path to recovery--are emerging from all this needless suffering, as a quiet revolution unfolds in healthcare that mainstream medicine and culture are finally beginning to notice: the recognition that most chronic pain symptoms do not have physical causes but originate in the brain as a fear response to perceived threats. Pain is a danger signal, like a fire alarm, which helps us survive by avoiding harm. But sometimes our brain misinterprets threats and overreacts by causing or prolonging pain when no danger is present. The brain reads not only physical but emotional stressors, and emotions themselves, as threats, especially if our nervous system is in a chronic fear state from ongoing stress. Chronic pain, also called neuroplastic or mind-body pain, is thus the product of a hyper-vigilant nervous system stuck in fight-or-flight mode, permanently primed to create a whole range of debilitating symptoms as a warning bell against unspecified danger.
Mind-body pain is 100 percent real. It is felt in the body and is not "all in our head." Yet with the process as it applies to pain symptoms still little understood or accepted, tens of millions of people are likely misdiagnosing and mistreating their pain. Rather than shots, drugs, surgery, or rest, what's needed is a psychological approach--a change in thinking, or mindset--that signals to the brain that it is safe and can turn off its alarm system.
A growing community of doctors, researchers, therapists, and patients--along with mounting research demonstrating its efficacy--are now poised to take this topic mainstream. Indeed, what started out as a hunch by health-care practitioners on the fringe is finally being proved true by science. And the burgeoning community of patients who have recovered from chronic pain using mind-body techniques--and who share and reinforce their healing experiences with others in online forums worldwide--has given the mind-body pain revolution new visibility and momentum. Together, the healers and the healed are advancing ideas with the potential to change the world.
Brain Pain is an accessible, story-driven book that explains the fundamentals of the mind-body pain revolution; describes the wealth of scientific evidence validating the belief that most chronic pain is brain-based instead of physical; and presents the most thorough but simple and compassionate recipe for healing yet to be offered in a single volume.



About the Author



Dr. Nathaniel Frank is an award-winning author, historian, journalist, and strategist who is internationally respected for his deployment of academic research to effect meaningful social, political, and personal change. The author of two critically acclaimed books on social policy, his two-decade career in LGBTQ advocacy helped end discrimination in access to military service and marriage, two of the most important civil rights victories of our time. Frank has appeared on TheDaily Show with Jon Stewart, The Rachel Maddow Show, Fresh Air, and elsewhere, and penned multiple op-eds in the New York Times, Washington Post and other top venues, including The Atlantic, Los Angeles Times, Slate and New York Magazine. Frank is currently the director of Cornell's What We Know Project, an initiative that translates academic research for the public and policymakers through writing and placement in high-impact general-interest media. He lives with his husband and their dog in Brooklyn, New York.

Dimensions (Overall): 8.25 Inches (H) x 5.5 Inches (W)
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 256
Genre: Health + Wellness
Sub-Genre: Pain Management
Publisher: Mayo Clinic Press
Format: Hardcover
Author: Nathaniel Frank
Language: English
Street Date: January 12, 2027
TCIN: 1008882434
UPC: 9798887702032
Item Number (DPCI): 247-38-4929
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Estimated ship dimensions: 1 inches length x 5.5 inches width x 8.25 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 1 pounds
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