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Heal Your Aching Back
80% percent of the world’s population
suffers from back pain at some point in their
lives. In the United States alone, each year
31 million back pain sufferers spend an estimated
$50 billion on medical treatments for their problem
but many find no relief.
Now, in Heal Your Aching Back, Dr.
Jeffrey Katz, M.D., M.Sc.,, a leading back specialist
at Harvard Medical School and the Spine Center
at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, unravels
the perplexities of back pain that have led to
diagnostic discrepancies and mixed-message treatment
for back pain sufferers. He contends that movement
and exercise, not rest, is the best way to either
relieve or alleviate pain.
Dr. Katz offers the latest research and proven
techniques for preventing back pain from occurring
or recurring. He is also comfortable with
a mélange of East and West, ancient and
modern, low-tech and high-tech treatments including
complementary therapies such as massage, yoga,
meditation, acupuncture, Mind-Body Therapies,
exercise, and herbal products for back pain. His
nineteen years of experience culminates in Heal
Your Aching Back which includes:
- Explanations of the anatomy of the neck,
spine and back
- Decoding why the back hurts
- Classifying the pain by its duration and
location
- Improved and new diagnostic approaches for
back pain
- Up-to-the-minute coverage on pain medicine
delivery methods including OxyContin, Celebrex,
narcotics, and other controversial drugs and
alternative treatments
- How to choose which doctors to visit
- Nonsurgical treatments for your backache
and guidance on when to consider surgery
Despite being a difficult syndrome to treat,
much can be done to improve the quality of life
of patients with chronic back pain. The
focus now becomes “functional restoration,” or
how to enable patients to become more limber,
stronger, and physically conditioned so they
can do the things that matter to them. At
some point, the back pain sufferer may simulate
the activities needed to return to their work
environment, known as “work hardening.” Dr.
Katz’s hope is that patients don’t
let their pain imprison them.
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