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by Aurornis
352 days ago
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> I hesitate to add a link to this on the thread, but there is an interesting story around chronic pain actually being psychological and there are now some high quality studies coming out. This is a misinterpretation of these studies which is common throughout this thread. The research isn’t showing that chronic pain is a psychological condition. It’s suggesting that some cases of nonspecific chronic pain that specifically do not match the symptoms of typical physically-rooted pain are psychological. The participants in this study were filtered for this criteria. For some reason, people see this idea and lose the nuance, concluding that most or all chronic pain is actually psychological. I think if someone matches the description used by the author of the substack for this HN entry (he describes his chronic pain as random and popping up all over his body) then pursuing the psychological explanation would be a very good idea. However, it’s getting frustrating to see all of the reductionist claims that “chronic pain is psychological”. |
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It's incredibly frustrating and disheartening... For obvious reasons, I'm not going to go into too much detail, but chronic (non-visible) pain is the worst of the worst. People will either think you're "faking"[0] or it's "just psychosomatic"[1]. I actually relish being able to work for a good long day because I'm lucky enough to actually enjoy making computers do stuff.
[0] Yes, I love to miss lots of family occasions, just because.
[1] I'll just will myself better. Nevermind the MRI scans and all that.
EDIT: I should add... the cognitive biases at work are understandable because they've probably been around since proto-humanity, but that doesn't change the outcomes.