
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
More than 20 percent of U.S. adults suffer from some form of chronic pain. For many, effective treatment remains elusive, with medications and even surgeries giving little in the way of relief. But in recent years, psychologists’ research has begun to suggest that at least for some people, the answer to chronic pain may come not from healing the body but from treating the mind. Dr. Tor Wager, of Dartmouth University, discusses the relationship among our thoughts, feelings and beliefs about pain and the actual physical pain that we feel, what pain looks like in the brain, and how new research findings are leading to effective new treatments for pain.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4.2
55 ratings
More than 20 percent of U.S. adults suffer from some form of chronic pain. For many, effective treatment remains elusive, with medications and even surgeries giving little in the way of relief. But in recent years, psychologists’ research has begun to suggest that at least for some people, the answer to chronic pain may come not from healing the body but from treating the mind. Dr. Tor Wager, of Dartmouth University, discusses the relationship among our thoughts, feelings and beliefs about pain and the actual physical pain that we feel, what pain looks like in the brain, and how new research findings are leading to effective new treatments for pain.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
90,523 Listeners
43,466 Listeners
1,362 Listeners
12,527 Listeners
2,412 Listeners
320 Listeners
14,791 Listeners
23,556 Listeners
28,309 Listeners
41,347 Listeners
265 Listeners
20,862 Listeners
328 Listeners
3,873 Listeners
120 Listeners