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The phenomenological-existential comprehension of chronic pain: going beyond the standing healthcare models
Authors:Daniela?Dantas?Lima  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:danieladanttas@gmail.com"   title="  danieladanttas@gmail.com"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Vera?Lucia?Pereira?Alves,Egberto?Ribeiro?Turato
Affiliation:1.Rua Presidente Bernardes 1293 ap.43 Jd. Flamboyant,Campinas CEP,Brasil;2.Av. Julio de Mesquita 536 ap. 32 Cambuí,Campinas CEP,Brasil;3.Departamento de Psicologia Médica e Psiquiatria FCM/UNICAMP,Caixa,Campinas,Brasil
Abstract:A distinguishing characteristic of the biomedical model is its compartmentalized view of man. This way of seeing human beings has its origin in Greek thought; it was stated by Descartes and to this day it still considers humans as beings composed of distinct entities combined into a certain form. Because of this observation, one began to believe that the focus of a health treatment could be exclusively on the affected area of the body, without the need to pay attention to patient’s subjectivity. By seeing pain as a merely sensory response, this model was not capable of encompassing chronic pain, since the latter is a complex process that can occur independently of tissue damage. As of the second half of the twentieth century, when it became impossible to deny the relationship between psyche and soma, the current understanding of chronic pain emerges: that of chronic pain as an individual experience, the result of a sum of physical, psychological, and social factors that, for this reason, cannot be approached separately from the individual who expresses pain. This understanding has allowed a significant improvement in perspective, emphasizing the characteristic of pain as an individual experience. However, the understanding of chronic pain as a sum of factors corresponds to the current way of seeing the process of falling ill, for its conception holds a Cartesian duality and the positivist premise of a single reality. For phenomenology, on the other hand, the individual in his/her unity is more than a simple sum of parts. Phenomenology sees a human being as an intending entity, in which body, mind, and the world are intertwined and constitute each other mutually, thus establishing the human being’s integral functioning. Therefore, a real understanding of the chronic pain process would only be possible from a phenomenological point of view at the experience lived by the individual who expresses and communicates pain.
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