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  1. Personalized pain descriptors may communicate the pain experience more appropriately, but may also contribute to an increased sensitivity of cortical pain processing areas by capturing increased attention for that individual. The language used as part of communication between therapists and people with persistent pain may provide an, as yet ...

  2. 1 de mar. de 1995 · She claims further that pain's "resistance to language is not simply one of its incidental or accidental attributes but is essential to what it is."" The reason that pain defeats language, according to her, is because Physical pain-unlike any other state of con­sciousness-has no referential content. It is not of or for anything.

  3. 4 CHRONIC PAIN LANGUAGE GUIDELINES DRAFT When talking about the impacts of chronic pain on the person living with chronic pain Appropriate language is a vital component in communicating a sense of self-determination, because feeling powerlessness can be overwhelming, especially when decisions seem to be or are in the hands of others.8

  4. The Federal Minister for Health, Greg Hunt has launched Painaustralia’s new language guidelines to mark Pain Awareness Week. Talking about Pain is a resource developed with the support of the Federal Government and aims to provide a guide to those working in the media and general community on the use of appropriate, inclusive and non-stigmatising language when talking or writing about ...

  5. 1 de mar. de 1995 · As conceptual, pain remains subjective but becomes an essentially social phenomenon. This implies changes in understanding of the relations between respondent and operant pain behavior, pain and pain behavior, and pain and suffering. The author proposes that if we accept that human pain experience occurs within language, then we must reject the ...

  6. Whereas metaphoric pain language elicited similar responses in both groups of participants, chronic migraine patients rated noxious stimuli as more painful when they were primed with a literal pain sentence. This finding suggests a role of personal experience on the way we represent and understand the meaning of words related to pain.

  7. Pain is a largely subjective experience, and one which is difficult to convey to others, and relies significantly on language to be communicated. The language used to describe pain is therefore an important aspect of understanding and assessing another's pain. A growing body of research has reported …