PAIN BRAIN
 

A documentary about a massive neuroscience study that challenges the medical industry’s approach to chronic pain.


 

ABOUT

When therapist Alan Gordon suggests psychology as the cure for millions of pain sufferers, it garners the attention of Yoni Ashar, a doctoral student working in the lab of Dr. Tor Wager, who is willing to put Alan’s claims to the test.

PAIN BRAIN balances scientific breakthrough alongside intimate therapy sessions with patients as Alan attempts to cure patients with only words and information.

How successful the treatment is could catalyze a paradigm shift – from body to brain – amongst doctors and patients.

 

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Mitch Dickman (producer/director)

Mitch has been a part of hundreds of projects spanning all genres, formats, and styles. He was named one of the “Top 10 Documakers to Watch” by Variety Magazine. Recent credits include the Emmy award winning Anti-Human Trafficking Public Service Announcement Campaign (Producer/Director 2022), Silent Rose  (Producer/Director – Topic Streaming 2020), Casting Jon Benet  (Producer – Netflix – Sundance 2017), Speaking is Difficult (Cinematographer – Sundance 2016), Rolling Papers (Producer/Director – SXSW 2015), Being Evel  (Line Producer – Sundance 2015) and Hanna Ranch (Producer/Director – NY Times Critics Pick 2014). Mitch holds a BFA in Film/Television with a minor in Political Science from the University of Colorado at Denver (where he currently sits on the advisory board and teaches as adjunct faculty).


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Tim Kaminski (producer/director)

Tim (producer/director) has helmed short narratives and a feature documentary, Classic (Producer/Director – AIFF 2020 Jury and Audience Award), and has produced for documentary series and films. In post, Tim has helped tell documentary stories spanning from e-sports (Artificial Gamer, 2021) to mass coral bleachings (Chasing Coral, 2017) and even daredevilry (Being Evel, 2015) and weed (Rolling Papers, 2015). Tim also keeps threatening to direct a narrative “this year” and, depending on when you read this, maybe that also will be true.

Laurie Polisky (producer/director)

Laurie (producer/director) is a neuroscience researcher turned filmmaker/podcaster, and was a co-author on the study featured in Pain Brain. She was recently awarded the Creative Science Non-Fiction Accelerator Award to develop a documentary on dream technology. She produced and scored the podcast Dear Alana, which hit #1 on Apple Podcasts its first week of release (August 2023), and is nominated for Best Original Music for the 2023 Signal Awards. She also produced the mental health podcast Tell Me About your Pain - with hosts Alan Gordon and Alon Ziv - which ranked in the top 1% of most listened to podcasts on mental health.

 

RESOURCES

 

Learn More

To learn more, follow these recommendations provided by Dr. Yoni Ashar:

Three great overviews on youtube:

An accessible, scientific video on the spreading of chronic pain due to central sensitization:

For some patients, simply understanding what is driving their pain is sufficient to dramatically reduce it.  The websites and books below contain lots of fantastic informational materials:


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Scientific Literature

For those inclined to the academic literature, here are a few key references from leading researchers.  The expansive literature on chronic pain and the brain is expansive – this is just to get you started!

  • Ashar YK, Gordon A, Schubiner H, et al. Effects of Pain Reprocessing Therapy vs Placebo and Usual Care for Patients with Chronic Back Pain: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Psychiatry. 2022;79:13-23. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.2669

  • Woolf, C. J. (2011). Central sensitization: Implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pain. Pain, 152(SUPPL.3), S2–S15. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.pain.2010.09.030

  • Arendt-Nielsen, L., Morlion, B., Perrot, S., Dahan, A., Dickenson, A., Kress, H. G., … Mohr Drewes, A. (2018). Assessment and manifestation of central sensitisation across different chronic pain conditions. European Journal of Pain (United Kingdom), 22(2), 216–241. http://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.1140

  • Hashmi, J. a., Baliki, M. N., Huang, L., Baria, A. T., Torbey, S., Hermann, K. M., … Apkarian, a. V. (2013). Shape shifting pain: chronification of back pain shifts brain representation from nociceptive to emotional circuits. Brain : A Journal of Neurology, 136(Pt 9), 2751–68. http://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awt211

  • Baliki, M. N., & Apkarian, A. V. (2015). Nociception, Pain, Negative Moods, and Behavior Selection. Neuron, 87(3), 474–491. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2015.06.005

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