Nortin M. Hadler knows backaches. For more than three decades as a
physician and medical researcher, he has studied the experience of
low back pain in people who are otherwise healthy. Hadler terms the
low back pain that everyone suffers at one time or another
"regional back pain." In this book, he addresses the history and
treatment of the ailment with the healthy skepticism that has
become his trademark, taking the "Hadlerian" approach to backaches
and the backache treatment industry in order to separate the
helpful from the hype.
Basing his critique on an analysis of the most current medical
literature as well as his clinical experience, Hadler argues that
regional back pain is overly medicalized by doctors, surgeons, and
alternative therapists who purvey various treatment regimens.
Furthermore, he observes, the design of workers' compensation,
disability insurance, and other "health" schemes actually thwarts
getting well. For the past half century, says Hadler, back pain and
back pain-related disability have exacted a huge toll, in terms of
pain, suffering, and financial cost.
Stabbed in the Back
addresses this issue at multiple levels: as a human predicament, a
profound social problem, a medical question, and a vexing public
policy challenge. Ultimately, Hadler's insights illustrate how the
state of the science can and should inform the art and practice of
medicine as well as public policy.
Stabbed in the Back will
arm any reader with the insights necessary to make informed
decisions when confronting the next episode of low back pain.