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What Your Doctor Doesn't Know About Fibromyalgia: What You Need to Know That Could Save Your Life

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If you've always trusted that most of your doctors are up-to-date, informed, and rarely mistaken about a diagnosis or treatment, this book may change your mind. Fibromyalgia is listed as one of the Top 10 most painful conditions in medicine, but, many doctors still do not "believe" in it, or, if they do, they have a vague notion of a collection of mild symptoms that they attribute to stress, menstrual problems, weight gain, depression or hysteria. None of these conditions have been scientifically linked to fibromyalgia.

FMS (a common term for fibromyalgia) attacks men and women of all ages, even children, and varies in intensity. Because doctors do not like to treat conditions they don't understand, patients are often ignored, denied pain relief, shuttled off to other "experts," or filled with powerful prescription drugs that may add new and confusing symptoms. What Your Doctor Doesn't Know about Fibromyalgia will help you take charge of your condition and teach you how to find physicians you can trust so that you can obtain the relief you need.

216 pages, Paperback

First published November 23, 2009

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Perry Lake.
Author 28 books96 followers
February 14, 2018
This book is insightful and informative about the mysterious ailment known as fibromyalgia. No one knows what causes it, and the medical establishment is guessing how to treat it.

This is one woman describing her own experience and her feelings about the treatment she received. Linda Meilink tells what she’s gone through and what she tried. And she tried everything.

There’s no happy ending where in the last chapter the author finally finds that miracle cure or the means to cope. Meilink's odyssey from diagnosis to quack treatment and ridicule is nightmarish and the only greater nightmare is how first the disease and then the medicines made her life a Hell.

Maybe because I do not suffer from fibromyalgia, I would have wanted to begin the book with a definition or explanation of the disease. That does comes later, when Meilink explains to those who have never had FMS, that it feels like rigor mortis but you’re still alive. Maybe the most dramatic (and yet still informative) place to start would be the tale of the woman at the yard sale. Other parts in this book read like a horror story that becomes real.

But it’s not all depressing. There’s humor and a great deal of sound advice for improving one’s life even if the chronic pain remains. Maybe the most important message is, try everything; if it works, stick with it.
Profile Image for Lizz.
49 reviews10 followers
June 26, 2010
This book has some good information, but nothing more than what good common sense gives one. It simply gave me some justification for the ideas and conclusions that I had already thought about the illness.
21 reviews1 follower
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August 5, 2011
I was so comforted by this book. The author new everything that I have been going thru for years. There is no cure in this book. No empty promises. Just an account of one sufferer and advice about certain meds. I will read it again.
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