Back Up: Why back pain treatments aren't working and the new science offering hope
Back pain is one of the world’s greatest public health challenges. It is the leading reason we visit the doctor, the leading reason we take time off work, the biggest cause of disability worldwide. Around one in 10 people will develop chronic, life-ruining back pain. And rates are growing. A multi-billion dollar industry exists that claims it can fix back pain – by shrinking discs, melting nerves, cutting spines up and putting them back together. Yet leading experts say more often than not, all this expensive medicine is making things worse. Liam Mannix is one of the many who live with back pain, and he takes his own experience as a starting point for this compelling and urgent work of investigative journalism. In the last 20 years, a new theory has emerged, born from cutting-edge neuroscience. It claims back pain often has little to do with the back or the discs or the spine. Instead, back pain is all about the brain. This new science offers new solutions – including, remarkably, evidence that just by teaching people the new theory of pain we can reduce it.
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Back Up: Why back pain treatments aren't working and the new science offering hope
Back pain is one of the world’s greatest public health challenges. It is the leading reason we visit the doctor, the leading reason we take time off work, the biggest cause of disability worldwide. Around one in 10 people will develop chronic, life-ruining back pain. And rates are growing. A multi-billion dollar industry exists that claims it can fix back pain – by shrinking discs, melting nerves, cutting spines up and putting them back together. Yet leading experts say more often than not, all this expensive medicine is making things worse. Liam Mannix is one of the many who live with back pain, and he takes his own experience as a starting point for this compelling and urgent work of investigative journalism. In the last 20 years, a new theory has emerged, born from cutting-edge neuroscience. It claims back pain often has little to do with the back or the discs or the spine. Instead, back pain is all about the brain. This new science offers new solutions – including, remarkably, evidence that just by teaching people the new theory of pain we can reduce it.
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Back Up: Why back pain treatments aren't working and the new science offering hope

Back Up: Why back pain treatments aren't working and the new science offering hope

by Liam Mannix
Back Up: Why back pain treatments aren't working and the new science offering hope

Back Up: Why back pain treatments aren't working and the new science offering hope

by Liam Mannix

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$24.99 
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Overview

Back pain is one of the world’s greatest public health challenges. It is the leading reason we visit the doctor, the leading reason we take time off work, the biggest cause of disability worldwide. Around one in 10 people will develop chronic, life-ruining back pain. And rates are growing. A multi-billion dollar industry exists that claims it can fix back pain – by shrinking discs, melting nerves, cutting spines up and putting them back together. Yet leading experts say more often than not, all this expensive medicine is making things worse. Liam Mannix is one of the many who live with back pain, and he takes his own experience as a starting point for this compelling and urgent work of investigative journalism. In the last 20 years, a new theory has emerged, born from cutting-edge neuroscience. It claims back pain often has little to do with the back or the discs or the spine. Instead, back pain is all about the brain. This new science offers new solutions – including, remarkably, evidence that just by teaching people the new theory of pain we can reduce it.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781742238081
Publisher: UNSW Press
Publication date: 08/01/2023
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 1,034,268
Product dimensions: 5.25(w) x 8.25(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Liam Mannix is a multi-award winning national science reporter for The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, as well as Nine's other stable of mastheads. He won the 2020 Walkley Award for Short Feature Writing, the 2019 Eureka Prize for Science Journalism, and has twice won the Walkley Young Journalist of the Year (Innovation) award.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The curse of a ‘bad back’ 1 The extent of the problem 2 You can’ t slip a disc 3 Disc degeneration – not a problem? 4 Too much medicine 5 ‘Good posture’ – and other back myths 6 Pain and profit 7 Big pharma 8 Spinal surgery 9 The new science of pain 10 The mind– body– back connection 11 Overcoming fear 12 A different approach to back pain 13 Conclusion Acknowledgements Notes
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