This riveting book takes the reader around the globe and through the centuries to discover how different cultures have sought to combat and treat physical pain. With colorful stories and sometimes frightening anecdotes, Dr. Thomas Dormandy describes a checkered progression of breakthroughs, haphazard experiments, ignorant attitudes, and surprising developments in human efforts to control pain. Attitudes toward pain and its perception have changed, as have the means of pain relief and scientific understanding. Dr. Dormandy offers a thoroughly fascinating, multi-cultural history that culminates with a discussion of today’s successes—and failures—in the struggle against pain. The book’s exploration is fused with accounts of the development of specific methods of pain relief, including the use of alcohol, plants, hypnosis, religious faith, stoic attitudes, local anesthesia, general anesthesia, and modern analgesics. Dr. Dormandy also looks at the most recent advances in pain clinics and palliative care for patients with terminal disease as well as the prospects for loosening pain’s grip in the future.
Thomas Dormandy was a retired consultant chemical pathologist and professor who worked at the University of Brunel and Whittington Hospital at the University of London. Dormandy wrote several books in addition to over three hundred scientific articles. In 1999 Dormandy published The White Death: A History of Tuberculosis. In it he combined scientific and sociological history to create his account of tuberculosis and various people's struggle with the disease primarily in the United States and Europe.
Reviews of The White Death were mixed among the critics. Muiris Houston, writing in the British Medical Journal, commented that Dormandy "has a knack of explaining technical matters" as he "weaves literature, social history, pharmacology, and epidemiology into an entertaining tale." In a Lancet review, Anne Hardy agreed that the book was "clearly written," but felt it "offers little to stimulate the interest of those already familiar with … the history of tuberculosis in general." Writing in the English Historical Review, Helen Jones thought the outline of the book was unclear. "There is no explanation at the outset of how the chapters are organized, and no sense of what will follow from chapter to chapter," Jones commented. A critic concluded in a Publishers Weekly review, however, that the "prodigious research and an anecdotal style blend to make this a fascinating foray into the history of medicine."
I know that this is not the best option to read while preparing for breast surgery, but here I am. It made me feel less afraid of pain and anaesthesia, compared to what I would have faced if I had been born a couple of centuries ago.
Dormandy T (2006) (20:41) Worst of Evils, The - The Fight Against Pain
List of illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction
Part I: The Mists of History
01. A gift of the gods 02. The grape and the poppy 03. Roots, barks, fruit, and leaves 04. Pain denied 05. Pain ignored 06. The heresies 07. Healing and holiness 08. Islam 09. The age of the cathedrals 10. Pain exalted
Part II: Scientific Stirrings
11. Rebirth, rediscovery, and reform 12. Going to war 13. Foundations 14. Heavenly dreams 15. Animal magnetism 16. Pneumatic medicine 17. Laughing gas 18. The terror of the knife 19. Hospital disease
Part III: Painless Surgery
20. To the threshold 21. A gentleman from the South 22. "This Yankee dodge" 23. In Gower Street 24. And beyond 25. Chloroform 26. The shape of dreams 27. Mr. Anaesthetist 28. Conflicting views 29. The rights of pain 30. Who needs an anaesthetic?
Part IV: The Beginning of the Modern
31. The new physiology 32. The new pathology 33. The acute abdomen 34. Old drugs, new drugs 35. The bark of the willow 36. Cocaine 37. High Victorian pain 38. The power of pain control
Part V: Yesteryears
39. Seminal years 40. The gift of St. Barbara 41. Tic douloureux 42. Twilight sleep 43. Dolorism 44. Renoir 45. Pills and poisons 46. The surgery of pain 47. The schism 48. Pain mechanisms 49. Pain clinics 50. Hospice
Some historians have, somehow, convinced themselves that shying away from ideas is a sort of modesty. Through the abuse of the anecdote they drag even the most interesting and complex topic to the level of chatter and gossip, to the point that one might imagine being in the presence of a spinster.
Probably not the best choice of books to read while suffering from an herniated disc and subsequent back surgery....but an interesting account of the history of pain management.
El nombre de Thomas Dormandy está íntimamente ligado a divulgación de la historia de la medicina, en especial por su obra magna “The White death: A history of Tuberculosis”. En esta ocasión, el autor se sumerge en la historia del dolor y la eterna lucha de la medicina por controlarlo. Su obra transcurre entre eventos históricos novelados que profundizan en la valoración del dolor en la antigüedad y el desarrollo de las terapias analgésicas y anestésicas que sustentan la base de la medicina moderna. Resulta sumamente interesante y entretenido aceptar el viaje propuesto por Dormandy para conocer la historia del gas hilarante, el cloroformo, “el truco yanqui”, la corteza de sauce (de donde se obtiene el ácido acetilsalicílico o aspirina), la cocaína, utilizada inicialmente como fármaco para el dolor (teniendo a Freud como uno de sus mayores defensores), para llegar al desarrollo de las unidades de dolor en la actualidad. Ahora, si el destino es atractivo, hay que estar dispuesto a asumir las horas de viaje, pues de no ser así, las más de 700 páginas del libro, podrían hacer que más de uno se bajara del tren.
a book about pain that also en passant gives some history on topics like surgery, etc... a good read and had fewer dragging parts than you might expect from a 500 page treatment
I read this hulking tomb cover-to-cover and thoroughly enjoyed it. I picked it up on sale table and was unsure of it. It sat around my shelves for quite some time, but after reading "Ether Day" I decided it might be just the thing. Thomas Dormandy looks at the history of pain and how it's been treated from Antiquity through to mid-20th Century. Dormandy's style is clear and readable, despite covering over two thousand years of medical history. More importantly, through 500 pages, Dormandy is able to keep the narrative both moving and interesting. A reader would not have to commit to the entire book. It is written cleanly enough that sections or chapters of interest could be read without anything being lost.
Una historia general sobre el fenómeno del dolor, da una perspectiva sobre cómo ha evolucionado su tratamiento, las causas y las consecuencias sociológicas, políticas, médicas o filosóficas.