Pain: Mind, Meaning, and Medicine
Book Details
Description
In Pain: Mind, Meaning and Medicine, neuroscientist and neuroethicist James Giordano provides a fundamental construct of pain as a neural event of the embodied brain and mind — embedded and nested within biological, psychological and social environments. He posits that this core construct of pain — as disorder and phenomenal illness — establishes contingencies that should shape and guide the practical and ethical conduct of research and clinical care. Taking the stance that scientific information, moral precepts, responsibilities, and medicine are inextricably related, he proposes an ethics of pain medicine — including relative moral obligations of the scientist, clinician, and patient — that addresses the effects of the current market mentalities upon research, development, and use of new and novel therapeutics; and affords insight to the problems and potential of pain care — both at present and in the future.
