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Severe Back Pain Is In Your Back, Not In Your
Head
When you get severe back pain and try to find treatment, you
will inevitably be told, even by a licensed doctor, that they
suspect your pain is all in your head. Expect this. These
doctors have seen a lot of fraudsters (trying to get insurance
money) and also have read about a theory very popular in the
1990’s. When this theory was promoted by national radio shock
jock Howard Stern, even more medical people gave this theory
credence. What is this theory? That your severe back pain is
all in your head.
Who Says So?
Sigmund Freud, considered the father of modern psychiatry,
often noted in his writings and lectures that mental problems
could give a patient inexplicable pains, including severe back
pain. He recommended that the only cure was a psychiatric one.
This idea has fallen in and out of favor since the early
1900’s.
Many books dealing with chronic pain in the 1970’s and 1980’s
also supported the idea that severe back pain was all in a
person’s head. Two of these books included the popular Oh, My
Aching Back by Leon Root, MD and Thomas Kiernan (1973), which
claimed exercises, better posture and affirmations would be
best for severe back pain. The Back Doctor by Hamilton Hall, MD
(1980) claimed that most (but not all) severe back pain was due
to emotional stress.
The Great Mystery
When you have severe back pain, you think that the mystery of
intelligent life on other planets will be solved long before
anyone can you an accurate diagnosis. Many people with severe
back pain must go to many doctors and specialists before
finding out why their back hurts. Many tests, medicines and
therapies seem to be a hit or miss affair. This is normal. It
seems severe back pain can become as individual as the people
they cause to suffer.
But do not give up hope. If one doctor can’t help you, get
another. It is in a doctor’s best interests to admit defeat and
try to recommend someone with more knowledge of back pain. With
the advancement in MRI scans, seeing minute problems in the
back can speed up diagnosis. Surgery is always a last resort,
but will be recommended by any doctor if you start loosing
bowel and bladder control (which is partially controlled by the
spine). Even a doctor who says the pain is all in your head
won’t be able to argue with that.
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