Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Vital reading for victims of chronic whiplash, 19 Jun 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Body Bears the Burden: Trauma, Dissociation, and Disease (Paperback)
Like me, have you never fully recovered following a "trivial" whiplash injury? Have you felt "odd" ever since? Are you stressed, things getting on top of you? Do you despair that no one, not even the doctors, seem to understand? Scaer does! This fascinating read explores the biochemical changes which can develop, following a soft tissue trauma, into an array of "unusual and multisystemic symptoms so universal and consistent from patient to patient that they either constitute a vast medicolegal conspiracy to defraud the auto insurance industry, or a remarkably consistent and reproducible clinical syndrome". How wonderful to discover I am not alone in my suffering, that I am actually quite 'normal' (considering what my body has suffered). And how wonderful to find his review of a variety of treatments. I hope this book instills some hope in you too!
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99 of 99 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Explains PTSD Like Nothing Else, 13 Jun 2003
By B. Naparstek - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Body Bears the Burden: Trauma, Dissociation, and Disease (Paperback)
Here finally is the neurological basis for the weirdly persistent, highly distressing, ever-cycling symptoms of posttraumatic stress. Don't let the medical terminology stop you from reading this book. It's a stunning revelation to see how physiologically based this syndrome really is, rooted as it is in the survival imperative of the freeze response and it's cognitive partner, dissociation. Makes those diagnostic categories which most of us therapists got trained on pretty irrelevant! I leaned heavily on the fabulous info in this book to write my own chapter on the physiology of PTSD. It's a must read for people with PTSD, their family, friends and counselors.
45 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The body does bear the burden, 30 Jan 2006
By Ronald A. Ruden - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Body Bears the Burden: Trauma, Dissociation, and Disease (Paperback)
When a thoughtful individual takes the time to summarize 30 years of experience, I view this as a great gift. When his insights allow us to help in treatment, it is a blessing. His major thesis is that trauma, when it produces a chronic stress disorder, can manifest in peculair physical ways. This is the key insight and Dr. Scaer backs his observations with lots of clinical and research data. No doubt some will find this a rigorous read, but it is well worth the effort. I had the opportunity to try this theory. A teacher in a rough part of town ( I live in NYC) witnessed in his class a fight where a student viciously punched a girl in the head, when the teacher interevened, the next blow was to the back of his head sending him into the chalk board and breaking his glasses. He presented 5 days later with classic post concussion syndrome of impaired memory, inablility to read and other congnitve deficits. Before I read Dr. Scaer's book, I would have have not been able to treat him, for, from a medical point of view, it was all the brain banging aroung in his skull that caused this. However, Dr. Scaer made me think that this was instead a PTSD from having witnessed a vicious attack. I treated him with EFT and remarkably two days later he was normal! (This would have usually taken many weeks). We are all searching for ways to treat PTSD, but at least we can now view some mystifying symptoms in a model for which hopefully soon we will be able to fix. Kudos, Dr. Scaer.
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Should be in the library of healthcare providers, 2 April 2008
By Paulina Perez, RN, BSN - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Body Bears the Burden: Trauma, Dissociation, and Disease, Second Edition (Paperback)
I like the first edition and this edition is even better!
I work in OB and have seen so many people who have been traumatized by the birth experience- both patients and healthcare givers alike.
I speak on "When Birth Causes Trauma" alot and this is one of the books that I refer my audience to.
This book should be in the library of everyone who deals with patients who have had a traumatic experience and any healthcare giver who has had a traumatic experience.
Paulina Perez, RN, BSN
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