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This riveting book takes the reader around the globe and through
the centuries to discover how different cultures have sought to
combat and treat physical pain. With colourful stories and
sometimes frightening anecdotes, Dr Thomas Dormandy describes a
chequered progression of breakthroughs, haphazard experiments,
ignorant attitudes, and surprising developments in human efforts to
control pain. Attitudes toward pain and its perception have
changed, as have the means of pain relief and scientific
understanding. Dr Dormandy offers a thoroughly fascinating,
multicultural history that culminates with a discussion of today's
successes, and failures, in the struggle against pain. The book's
exploration is fused with accounts of the development of specific
methods of pain relief, including the use of alcohol, plants,
hypnosis, religious faith, stoic attitudes, local anaesthesia,
general anaesthesia and modern analgesics. Dr Dormandy also looks
at the most recent advances in pain clinics and palliative care for
patients with terminal disease as well as the prospects for
loosening pain's grip in the future. Thomas Dormandy, MD, is a
retired consultant pathologist, Whittington Hospital, University of
London, and Brunel University, London. He is the author of the
prize-winning book 'The White Death: A History of Tuberculosis' and
'Opium: Reality's Dark Dream', published by Yale University Press.
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