in partnership with the
Behavioral Medicine Research & Training
Foundation
Non-profit Scientific & Educational Organization 91-1948669
operating under Section 501c3 of the US Internal Revenue Code
6576 Blue Mountain Road, Port Angeles, WA 98362
Course Description and outline for:
Pain Assessment
and Intervention
For Behavioral Clinicians
45 Hours of CE Credit / Course Fee $750
Presented by Richard A. Sherman, PhD
Course Concept and Objectives:
Students learn by watching audiovisual lectures and movies provided on the course web
site, reading assignments both from materials provided on the web site, and standard texts, and
interacting with their instructor via e-mail. They answer short essay questions after each lecture
rather than taking exams. Previous students have found that this course takes between 45 and 95
hours of work to perform.
Pain is among the most common reasons patients approach the health care community and
is, tragically, among the least successfully managed problems. The assessment and management
of acute and chronic pain are fraught with ignorance, poor training, difficulties, complexities,
and controversies all of which combine to produce pervasive misdiagnoses and ludicrously
improper, ineffective care. Thus, patients with both acute and chronic pain frequently receive
poor care from the medical community and are left to fend for themselves as best they can in the
world of rumor, self-medication, and charlatans.
It is the objective of this course to provide you with the information you need to
understand the underlying problems, be able to perform a reasonable assessment of patients with
chronic and acute pain both on and off the ward, recognize when pain is not being appropriately
or adequately ameliorated, and to be able to make or recommend interventions consistent with
your clinical skills. Specifically, this course intends to:
1. Provide you with a basic understanding of the physiology, biochemistry, and
psychology underlying pain mechanisms.
2. Provide you with sufficient knowledge about how pain mechanisms work to apply the
knowledge to their evaluative and therapeutic interventions.
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