Pain: the Gift Nobody Wants
BMJ 2011; 343 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.d4251 (Published 06 July 2011) Cite this as: BMJ 2011;343:d4251- Anthony Papagiannis, respiratory physician, St Luke’s Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece
- antpap56{at}otenet.gr
The Greek word “stigma” literally means a visible mark on the skin. It is also used to designate the characterisation of a person in a negative way that leads to discrimination. Leprosy carried a stigma from Biblical times well into the 20th century. This stigma had its roots in the external deformities that gave patients a repulsive look. A dysmorphic appearance combined with fear of contagion leading to epidemics made patients outcasts. Literature and cinema (for example, Ben Hur, Papillon) perpetuated the idea of leprosy as a “curse of God.” Eventually the name itself was replaced by the politically inoffensive “Hansen’s disease.”
The traditional view was that the flesh …
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