{"id":118558,"date":"2017-11-04T18:36:11","date_gmt":"2017-11-05T02:36:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=118558"},"modified":"2017-11-04T18:37:52","modified_gmt":"2017-11-05T02:37:52","slug":"118558","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=118558","title":{"rendered":"Crooked: Outwitting the Back Pain Industry and Getting on the Road to Recovery III"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Crooked-Outwitting-Industry-Getting-Recovery-ebook\/dp\/B01KFBO81U\/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&#038;qid=1509649917&#038;sr=8-1&#038;keywords=crooked+book\">Here are some excerpts from this 2016 book<\/a>:<\/p>\n<p>Long before scientists had access to the imaging technology that allowed them to visualize neuronal activity, physiatrist John Sarno grasped the relationship between chronic pain and emotional distress. Every time I told anyone I was writing about back pain, I learned to expect questions about whether I knew Sarno\u2019s work. Almost everyone had run into someone who had been cured by Sarno, often after years of discomfort. I was happy to be able to inform his many admirers that, yes, I had actually spoken with the rock star of the back world. By the time we talked on the phone, Sarno was well up in years\u2014and perhaps less guarded about expressing his feelings than he would have been in his younger days. After medical school at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, John Sarno worked for a decade as a family practitioner in a small town in upstate New York, making house calls and delivering babies on kitchen tables. He returned to Manhattan for further training<br \/>\nin the medical specialty of physiatry, at NYU Langone Medical Center\u2019s Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine. At first, Sarno treated hospitalized patients who had suffered strokes and spinal cord injuries or lost limbs to amputation. They worked hard in physical therapy, and according to him most succeeded in regaining significant function. But when Sarno was reassigned in 1965 to the outpatient department at the Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, where he became director of the back pain clinic, his patients did not respond well to standard physical therapy protocols. Instead, like migrating birds, they flitted from practitioner to practitioner, fruitlessly trying to find someone who could fix them. One of John Sarno\u2019s senior colleagues at NYU, physiatrist Hans Kraus, had treated John F. Kennedy\u2019s intractable back pain with an intensive exercise protocol. The president had already undergone decades of treatment, including several spine surgeries. The young and reputedly vigorous president was actually so weak, Kraus found, that he couldn\u2019t do a single sit-up. When he was directed to touch his toes, his fingers did not even reach to his knees. In October 1961, JFK started the Kraus program, a rigorous routine including aerobic, strength, and flexibility exercises performed twice a day, three days a week. Within a year, the president was able to lift his small children, pull on his own socks, and swing a golf club. Kraus diagnosed what he called a \u201cmuscle tension syndrome,\u201d common among people who were exposed to significant stress, with no ready escape by means of physical action. \u201cYour muscles, your mind, your heart and all your organs prepare to act, but you do nothing,\u201d Kraus wrote in his book, Backache, Stress and Tension. \u201cYou may wish to fight, you may wish to flee, but modern civilization prevents you from carrying out your natural impulses.\u00a0.\u00a0.\u00a0. You race your engines without going anywhere.\u201d Chronic muscle tension, Kraus hypothesized, created a cycle that continually generated more pain. He recognized that, without sufficient exercise, oxygen-deprived muscles undergo a process called anaerobic glycolysis, through which lactic acid and other wastes accumulate in the body. Although many other specialists had failed with JFK, Kraus succeeded. John Sarno saw the wisdom in exercise, but he recognized that workouts three times a week were not in the cards for most of his patients. Nor was Sarno convinced that exercise would resolve their back problems, which he viewed as manifestations of emotional turmoil. Although Sarno was neither psychoanalytically trained, nor well acquainted with the works of Sigmund Freud, he attributed the pent-up rage to an unruly subconscious process rather than a physiological one. If he could convince a patient that his subconscious was kicking up a fuss in order to distract him from personal issues, and that this fuss was manifested in reduced blood flow to the postural muscles, the patient would relinquish the notion that something was structurally wrong and shortly return to a functional life. He called the condition \u201ctension myositis syndrome,\u201d or \u201cTMS.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Sarno found that the patients who had the most success with his approach were hardworking perfectionists, driven by self-imposed pressure that left them feeling stretched to the breaking point. Often, they\u2019d had a chaotic childhood, when they\u2019d struggled to gain control over unpredictable and toxic environments. Although the specifics would not come to light for a couple of decades, in time, research would show that people (especially women) who experience significant physical and psychological adversity in childhood are at greater risk for chronic pain than those whose early days were less challenging. Sarno published his first book in 1982, but it was not until Healing Back Pain: The Mind-Body Connection came out in 1991, eventually selling over a million copies, that he became a household name. In 1998, when Sarno published The Mindbody Prescription: Healing the Body, Healing the Pain, 20\/20 coanchor John Stossel was in the midst of his own struggle. After Stossel sat down with Sarno for a chat, he realized that his back felt better for the first time in months. As he planned a TV special on Sarno, Stossel requested permission to call twenty of his patients, randomly chosen from the doctor\u2019s medical charts. The patients that Stossel\u2019s team interviewed all reported being \u201cbetter,\u201d or even \u201cmuch better.\u201d Roughly fifteen million people watched that segment, and Sarno became \u201cAmerica\u2019s back doctor.\u201d But there was a problem. Sarno was unmistakably bad for business. He did not endear himself to the medical community when he announced that physicians were \u201cchiefly responsible for the pain epidemic that now exists in this country.\u201d Once patients became Sarnoites, they lost their appetite for serial interventions. They canceled long-scheduled surgical procedures, usually at the eleventh hour, citing a new perception that their problems were emotional, rather than orthopedic. They stopped getting MRIs and spinal injections, and didn\u2019t show up for physical therapy appointments.<br \/>\nAt the peak of his popularity, John Sarno charged up to $1,500 for in-person consultations. But each week he set aside several days when he spoke, gratis, to prospective or current patients, regardless of whether they were celebrities, housewives, or truck drivers. He exorcised author and business pundit Tony Schwartz\u2019s spinal demons in forty-eight hours. In our phone interview, Schwartz outlined why he thought Sarno\u2019s approach was so successful: \u201cHe takes the fear out of the equation\u2014the fear of \u2018Uh-oh, something must really be wrong with me,\u2019\u201d he explained. \u201cAnd the impact on symptoms is dramatic.\u201d Most of Sarno\u2019s patients never actually saw him. Renn Kaminski, a retired New Jersey police officer, struggled with back pain and sciatica for thirty years\u2014from the time he was nineteen until he reached the age of forty-nine. \u201cThree or four times a year,\u201d he said, \u201cI\u2019d be out of commission for a week. It might be because I\u2019d been involved in a foot chase, or because I\u2019d twisted the wrong way when I was putting on my pants.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the middle of a six-month episode of recurrent sciatica, Kaminski limped down the hallway of a local elementary school, where he was teaching kids about drug safety. The school\u2019s principal, familiar with the symptoms, handed him his own dog-eared copy of Healing Back Pain. \u201cI took it home,\u201d Kaminski said, \u201cbut I was in too much pain to read it, so I tossed it on the coffee table, where it gathered dust for a couple of months.\u201d When he finally mustered the energy, Kaminski read the book straight through\u2014several times. \u201cSuddenly, I realized that my problem was that my mind was messing with me,\u201d he said. Two weeks later, he was better. \u201cI haven\u2019t had serious pain since,\u201d he said, \u201cwhich is not to say that I haven\u2019t felt that threatening twinge, where you go, \u2018Now, I\u2019ve done it.\u2019 But when that happens, I just shake my hips like a hula dancer\u2014like Stan Musial on the Cardinals used to\u2014and then I stand up straight and walk away. I don\u2019t obsess. I didn\u2019t change my circumstances. I just changed the way my body reacted to the circumstances.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><iframe width=\"560\" height=\"315\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/2B2IE0o7diU\" frameborder=\"0\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe><\/p>\n<p><iframe width=\"560\" height=\"315\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/p20QhBz-Tik\" frameborder=\"0\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Here are some excerpts from this 2016 book: Long before scientists had access to the imaging technology that allowed them to visualize neuronal activity, physiatrist John Sarno grasped the relationship between chronic pain and emotional distress. Every time I told &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=118558\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[29612],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-118558","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-back"],"aioseo_notices":[],"aioseo_head":"\n\t\t<!-- All in One SEO 4.9.10 - aioseo.com -->\n\t<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Here are some excerpts from this 2016 book: Long before scientists had access to the imaging technology that allowed them to visualize neuronal activity, physiatrist John Sarno grasped the relationship between chronic pain and emotional distress. 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