sophia8
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2003
- Messages
- 2,457
A woman on a list I'm on has just posted with a long tale of her current medical woes - she says she's been diagnosed with a ragbag of "mixed connective tissue disorders" including MS, Lupus, Scleraderma, Lou Gehrigs and possibly myositis; plus Achalasia (a swallowing disorder), plus a perforated colon, plus possible cancer of the liver.
Now, I do have a friend who is practically a walking medical encyclopedia of chronic illnesses; so although this woman's list sounds unlikely, I'll take her word for it (for now).
However, what makes my skeptic antenna twitch is her claim:
I have arthritis and tendonitis, and when I need to describe the level of the pain to doctors, I'm simply asked to give a figure between 1 to 10 - nobody's ever suggested that there might be an objective way of measuring my pain.
Now, I do have a friend who is practically a walking medical encyclopedia of chronic illnesses; so although this woman's list sounds unlikely, I'll take her word for it (for now).
However, what makes my skeptic antenna twitch is her claim:
She doesn't say how this pain was measured. So how do medics measure pain? Is it possible to measure pain other than subjectively?my pain levels run from 30 to 80 times what someone with terminal bone cancer endures.
I have arthritis and tendonitis, and when I need to describe the level of the pain to doctors, I'm simply asked to give a figure between 1 to 10 - nobody's ever suggested that there might be an objective way of measuring my pain.
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