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Related Concept Videos

Analgesia and Pain Management01:25

Analgesia and Pain Management

585
Pain is critical to various clinical pathologies, provoking an urgent need for effective management. Pain, whether acute or chronic, is a complex neurochemical process. Its alleviation depends on the type, with nonopioid analgesics effective for mild to moderate pain, such as musculoskeletal or inflammatory pain, while neuropathic pain responds best to anticonvulsants, tricyclic antidepressants, or serotonin/norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors. For severe acute or chronic pain, opioids may be...
585
Pain01:20

Pain

475
Pain serves as a critical warning signal that alerts the body to potential or actual harm. When mechanical pressure on the skin is intense, such as from a sharp pinch, the sensation transitions from touch to pain. Similarly, extreme temperatures, like a hot pot handle, convert the sensation of heat into pain. Pain can also result from overstimulation of other senses, such as blinding light, loud noise, or the intense heat from habañero peppers. This ability to sense pain is essential for...
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Nociception01:44

Nociception

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Nociception—the ability to feel pain—is essential for an organism’s survival and overall well-being. Noxious stimuli such as piercing pain from a sharp object, heat from an open flame, or contact with corrosive chemicals are first detected by sensory receptors, called nociceptors, located on nerve endings. Nociceptors express ion channels that convert noxious stimuli into electrical signals. When these signals reach the brain via sensory neurons, they are perceived as pain.
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Naturalistic Observations02:30

Naturalistic Observations

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If you want to understand how behavior occurs, one of the best ways to gain information is to simply observe the behavior in its natural context. However, people might change their behavior in unexpected ways if they know they are being observed. How do researchers obtain accurate information when people tend to hide their natural behavior? As an example, imagine that your professor asks everyone in your class to raise their hand if they always wash their hands after using the restroom. Chances...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 27, 2025

Author Spotlight: Quantifying Pain Experience – An Illustrative Approach Using the Pain Body Diagram
09:00

Author Spotlight: Quantifying Pain Experience – An Illustrative Approach Using the Pain Body Diagram

Published on: July 7, 2023

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Attending Pain, Ethnographically.

Megan Crowley-Matoka

    Literature and Medicine
    |April 25, 2024
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Ethnography offers unique insights into how clinicians represent and attend to patients' non-narrative pain experiences. This study examines clinical encounters to understand the social and partial nature of pain representation.

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    Area of Science:

    • Medical Anthropology
    • Sociology of Health and Illness
    • Qualitative Health Research

    Background:

    • Non-narrative pain representation poses challenges in clinical settings.
    • Ethnography provides a framework for understanding subjective experiences.
    • Clinical encounters involve complex social dynamics in pain communication.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To explore the utility of ethnography in understanding non-narrative pain representation.
    • To analyze how clinicians attend to and represent patients' pain.
    • To investigate the social and partial aspects of pain representation in clinical work.

    Main Methods:

    • Utilizing an ethnographic sensibility to analyze clinical encounters.
    • Examining fragmentary and episodic knowledge-making in ethnographic practice.
    • Focusing on two specific ethnographic moments from ongoing research.

    Main Results:

    • Ethnography highlights the partiality and sociality inherent in pain representation.
    • Clinical encounters reveal consequential forms of attention and representation.
    • Ephemeral utterances and exchanges are crucial in everyday clinical work.

    Conclusions:

    • An ethnographic approach enhances understanding of pain representation in healthcare.
    • The study underscores the importance of social context in clinical pain experiences.
    • Ethnography offers valuable methods for studying the complexities of patient-provider communication regarding pain.