Chronic pain and fatigue: Timescale, feedback, and overrides
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Abstract
Chronic pain causes chronic fatigue, through various physiological and psychological mechanisms.9 In addition to neurology and biochemistry, pain and fatigue can be studied ethnographically, as sensations perceived by the individual experiencing them.11 For some researchers, this includes autoethnography, analysing one's own experience.1,3,7 Using that approach, I propose 3 additions to the research agenda set by Van Damme et al.9
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Pain
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159
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7
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© 2018 Wolters Kluwer. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. It is posted here with permission of the copyright owner(s) for your personal use only. No further distribution permitted. For information about this journal please refer to the journal’s website or contact the author(s).
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Biomedical and clinical sciences
Psychology
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Buckley, RC, Chronic pain and fatigue: Timescale, feedback, and overrides, Pain, 2018, 159 (7), pp. 1429-1430