Is it all in your head? True stories of imaginary illness

Suzanne O'Sullivan

Book - 2015

"A neurologist delves into the often misunderstood world of psychosomatic disorders, sharing individual case histories of patients who have medically unexplained symptoms, and encourages people to look with compassion at the ways in which our brains act out and to question our failure to credit the intimate connection between mind and body."--NoveList.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Other Press 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Suzanne O'Sullivan (author)
Physical Description
291 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781590517956
  • 1. Tears
  • 2. Pauline
  • 3. Matthew
  • 4. Shahina
  • 5. Yvonne
  • 6. Alice
  • 7. Rachel
  • 8. Camilla
  • 9. Laughter
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

By altering the conventional discussion surrounding psychosomatic illnesses, O'Sullivan helps laypeople recognize the reality of a problem that is often treated dismissively, in and outside of the medical field. A consultant in neurology, she is most interested in diseases that occupy the unconscious, their symptoms unmeasurable and their causes unknown-conditions that might be revealed by technologies like MRI but remain essentially mysterious. Each chapter of this book presents a case study, lending vivid life to patients with psychosomatic disorders, along with extensive context for everything including the bygone diagnosis of "hysteria" and the dawn of neurology as a medical profession. Seizures, still difficult to account for and treat, receive extensive attention. And this study is not just about the patients, but the intricacies, the inevitable challenges, of the doctor-patient encounter. Given repeated emphasis is the stigma of diagnosis-a stigma that O'Sullivan combats through her dedication to the individual stories she tells. If empathy is bolstered by understanding, then this book will bring such sentiments to a rarely understood condition. It will engage readers' heads, but also quite possibly enter their hearts. Agent: Kirsty McLachlan, David Godwin Associates. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Following her 2016 Wellcome Book Prize winner, It's All in Your Head, Epilepsy Society neurophysiology consultant O'Sullivan's latest encourages rethinking the ways in which the subconscious influences physical health, providing a catalyst for discussion about the intricacies of cognitive processes and the organic expressions of maladies. Unlike Jo -Marchant's Cure, which concentrates on the mind's ability to alleviate illnesses, this title focuses more on cause rather than remedy. A major weakness is this work's lack of scientific research and data to support its conclusions. However, the anecdotal evidence of the case studies does invite a closer analysis of the origins of the patients' disorders, and the sympathetic tone of the author differs from the typical clinical attitudes toward the mind-body connection. -VERDICT With heavy emphasis on the medical theories of Jean-Martin Charcot, Pierre Janet, and Sigmund Freud, this book provides an appealing viewpoint for readers with a strong interest in psychology. It also allows those with medical conditions to explore any overlooked nonphysical causes of their ailments.-Bonnie Parker, Southern Crescent Technical Coll., Thomaston, GA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Feeling out of sorts? Take two imaginary aspirin and call us in the morning.Trained in both neurology and clinical neurophysiology, British doctor O'Sullivan sometimes strays from both fields to enter the realm of psychology and the within-mind processes that can make an otherwise healthy person feel very sick indeed. As she writes, her early experiences came in a study of people with epilepsy who were not responding to standard treatmentsnot responding, it turns out, because 70 percent of them were not really suffering from epilepsy but instead from psychological troubles. "And each person I encountered had a story to tell," she writes, "and too often that story was one of a journey through the hospital system that led them to no satisfactory understanding of what was wrong." In all this, long-ignored standards become relevant anew, and diagnosis by way of analysis becomes ever more critical, since, as the author notes, people themselves are rather untrustworthy witnesses to and interpreters of their own experienceand "distressed, frightened people are more unreliable still." Blending well-spun anecdote with a gently worn survey of the current medical art, O'Sullivan examines the strengths and weaknesses of approaches to psychosomatic disorders (which "are noteworthy for how little respect they have for any single part of the body") and stress-related neuroses and illnesses, some of them rare, some of them so commonplace that we scarcely notice whether someone has them or not; some "somatic symptom disorders" happen as a result of readily identifiable trauma, but some are not obvious and even secretive. As a result, the author concludes, just as there is no single cause of psychosomatic illness, neither is there a single cure. "To look for one," she notes, "is akin to looking for the cure for unhappiness." An intriguing look at how mental processes affect and alter our viewsand feelingsof health and illness. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.