A significant proportion of symptoms are medically unexplained. People experience illness but no pathological basis for the symptoms can be discerned by the medical profession. Living without a clinical diagnosis or medical explanation has consequences for such patients. This paper reports on a small qualitative interview-based study of 18 neurology outpatients in England who live with such medically unexplained symptoms (MUS). The findings broadly concur with those identified in the related literatures on medically unexplained syndromes and unexplained pain: the difficulties of living with uncertainty; dealing with legitimacy; and a resistance to psychological explanations of their suffering. From a thematic analysis of the interview data ...
Background: Although research about medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) is extensive, problems stil...
The term medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) is used to describe physical complaints with no observ...
A significant proportion of somatic symptoms remain, at present, medically unexplained. These sympto...
A significant proportion of symptoms are medically unexplained. People experience illness but no pat...
Modern medicine is based on the identification of biological parameters of disease, a clearly define...
This paper reports on a qualitative study, which explores the narratives of patients, who live with ...
In this chapter, we traverse and integrate perspectives on psychosomatic illness from primary care a...
Systematic Literature ReviewThe literature review explored why healthcare professionals have negativ...
Abstract Background Patients with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) are common in primary care, a...
Lay and medical beliefs are not separate systems. The beliefs of somatizing patients, in particular,...
Patients with medically unexplained symptoms comprise from 15% to 30% of all primary care consultati...
In this article medically unexplained physical symptoms are theoretica-lly explored as inseparable f...
The research reported here is largely concerned with the theoretical development and empirical elabo...
Throughout affluent societies there are growing numbers of people who survive severe brain injuries ...
"Medically unexplained symptoms" or "MUS" has been constructed as a term to describe persistent phys...
Background: Although research about medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) is extensive, problems stil...
The term medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) is used to describe physical complaints with no observ...
A significant proportion of somatic symptoms remain, at present, medically unexplained. These sympto...
A significant proportion of symptoms are medically unexplained. People experience illness but no pat...
Modern medicine is based on the identification of biological parameters of disease, a clearly define...
This paper reports on a qualitative study, which explores the narratives of patients, who live with ...
In this chapter, we traverse and integrate perspectives on psychosomatic illness from primary care a...
Systematic Literature ReviewThe literature review explored why healthcare professionals have negativ...
Abstract Background Patients with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) are common in primary care, a...
Lay and medical beliefs are not separate systems. The beliefs of somatizing patients, in particular,...
Patients with medically unexplained symptoms comprise from 15% to 30% of all primary care consultati...
In this article medically unexplained physical symptoms are theoretica-lly explored as inseparable f...
The research reported here is largely concerned with the theoretical development and empirical elabo...
Throughout affluent societies there are growing numbers of people who survive severe brain injuries ...
"Medically unexplained symptoms" or "MUS" has been constructed as a term to describe persistent phys...
Background: Although research about medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) is extensive, problems stil...
The term medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) is used to describe physical complaints with no observ...
A significant proportion of somatic symptoms remain, at present, medically unexplained. These sympto...