The Future of Spine Surgery. Getting Smaller, Safer, and Better.

Lack of consensus about pain care has been a persistent challenge since pain was designated the 5th vital sign in 2000. Despite agreement that there needs to be better integration of the delivery of medical and mental healthcare in the United States, confusion exists in the context of the relationship between biomedical and biopsychosocial approaches to pain care. When the International Association for the Study of Pain approved a definition of pain in 1979, the intention was to promote the idea that pain was not only a nociceptive phenomenon that could be explained on neurophysiologic basis, but also an emotional experience “associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage” recognizing the need for a universal classification of the human experience of pain. Some argue that dissemination of this “new” definition was poor and ineffective, and that the nomenclature still needs to be more clearly refined. This presentation will explore these topics as well as an in-depth review of the first revision of IASP definition of pain in over 40 years (July 2020), from both a psychologist’s and physician’s perspective.

Additional Information

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PDF icon Slides and disclosures8.22 MB
Course summary
Available credit: 
  • 1.00 AANP
  • 1.00 ACCME (All Other)
  • 1.00 ACCME (MD/DO Only)
  • 1.00 ACPE Pharmacy
  • 1.00 ANCC
  • 1.00 APA
Course opens: 
11/01/2021
Course expires: 
11/01/2022
Rating: 
0

Available Credit

  • 1.00 AANP
  • 1.00 ACCME (All Other)
  • 1.00 ACCME (MD/DO Only)
  • 1.00 ACPE Pharmacy
  • 1.00 ANCC
  • 1.00 APA
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