by PAINS Project | Jul 30, 2014 | Janice Lynch Schuster, Living with Pain, News, News & Updates, Treatment Options |
by Janice Lynch Schuster – Published by MariaShriver.com When I underwent a procedure that my oral surgeon described as “just a snip”, my life changed. A longtime citizen in the land of the well, the surgery left me a deportee to the land of chronic pain....
by PAINS Project | Jul 29, 2014 | Authors, Myra Christopher, PAINS Updates |
by Myra Christopher Recently, a friend and colleague who is a faculty member of a medical school that is transitioning to an entirely digitized library told me that they were giving away all their hard-bound books and asked me if I would like for her to retrieve some...
by PAINS Project | Jul 23, 2014 | News, News & Updates, Research, Research Articles, Tools |
Kurt Kroenke, MD; Erin E. Krebs, MD; Jingwei Wu, MS; Zhangsheng Yu, PhD; Neale R. Chumbler, PhD; Matthew J. Bair, MD JAMA. 2014;312(3):240-248. doi:10.1001/jama.2014.7689. Importance: Chronic musculoskeletal pain is among the most prevalent, costly, and disabling...
by PAINS Project | Jul 22, 2014 | Janice Lynch Schuster, Living with Pain, News, News & Updates |
by Janice Lynch Schuster – Published by The Washington Post I have never been one to visit a doctor regularly. Even though I had accumulated my share of problems by age 50— arthritic knees, poor hearing — I considered myself to be among the mostly well. But 19...
by PAINS Project | Jul 22, 2014 | Authors, Joel Burnett, PAINS Updates, Reading & Resources |
by Joel Burnett, University of Kansas, School of Medicine Summer reading lists are an annual tradition and, as the tradition goes, the lists consist of light-hearted, breezy fiction – the perfect literary match to a refreshing lemonade or a day at the beach. But if...