Peter Staats

Peter Sean Staats is an American physician, educator, author, inventor and clinical researcher, specializing in interventional pain medicine. He is the founder of the Division of Pain Medicine at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and was the Division's chief for nearly a decade.[1][2][3] He is a past president of the North American Neuromodulation Society.[4] He is the past president of the New Jersey Society of Interventional Pain Medicine.[5]

Peter Sean Staats
NationalityAmerican
Education
  • University of California Santa Barbara
  • University of Michigan Medical School
  • Johns Hopkins University
OccupationPhysician, Educator

He is the author of over four hundred articles, abstracts and book chapters regarding pain management and neuromodulation. He has written or co-edited 11 books on the science and clinical practice of interventional pain medicine.[6][7][8][9] He has written a broad theory of pain with Arthur Staats and Hamid Hekmat that unifies the biology with the psychologic aspects of pain.[10][11][12]

Further reading

  • Sudhir Diwan; Peter Staats (January 2015). Atlas of Pain Medicine Procedures. McGraw Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-173876-7.
  • Peter Staats; Mark Wallace (March 2015). Pain Medicine and Management: Just the Facts. McGraw Hill. ISBN 9780071817455.
  • Peter Staats; Sanford Silverstein (May 2016). Controlled Substance Management in Chronic Pain: A Balanced Approach. Springer. ISBN 978-3319309620.

References

  1. Lifting the Shadow of Pain, at New Jersey Monthly; by Wayne J. Guglielmo; published October 14, 2008; retrieved March 13, 2014
  2. Ooo-la-la! Pain relief that's a fantasy at Johns Hopkins Magazine by Melissa Hendricks, published June 2000; retrieved March 13, 2014
  3. Trends in Stem Cell Research Edited by Erik V. Greer, Published 2005 by Nova Publishers (via Google Books)
  4. Neuromodulation Newsletter Published Spring 2004, retrieved March 13, 2014
  5. "List of Board Members". NJSIPP.org. Retrieved 2014-03-13.
  6. In Pain? Your Favorite Food May Get You Through It at ABC News; by Radha Chitale; published August 1, 2008; retrieved March 13, 2014
  7. Prager J, Deer T, Levy R, Bruel B, Buchser E, Caraway D, Cousins M, Jacobs M, McGlothlen G, Rauck R, Staats P, Stearns L. "Best practices for intrathecal drug delivery for pain". Neuromodulation. 17: 354–72, discussion 372. doi:10.1111/ner.12146. PMID 24446870.
  8. Erdek MA, Staats PS. "Spinal cord stimulation for angina pectoris and peripheral vascular disease". Anesthesiol Clin North America. 21: 797–804. doi:10.1016/s0889-8537(03)00090-7. PMID 14719720.
  9. Deer TR, Smith HS, Cousins M, Doleys DM, Levy RM, Rathmell JP, Staats PS, Wallace M, Webster LR. "Consensus guidelines for the selection and implantation of patients with noncancer pain for intrathecal drug delivery". Pain Physician. 13: E175-213. PMID 20495597.
  10. Staats, Peter S., Hamid Hekmat, and Arthur W. Staats. "The psychological behaviorism theory of pain: A basis for unity." Pain Forum. Vol. 5. No. 3. Churchill Livingstone, 1996.
  11. Pain Medicine and Management: Just the Facts, by Mark S. Wallace and Peter Staats; Published 2005 by McGraw Hill Professional (via Google Books)
  12. Interventional Pain Management: Image-Guided Procedures by P. Prithvi Raj, Leland Lou, Serdar Erdine, Peter S. Staats, Steven D. Waldman et. al; Published 2008 by Elsevier Health Sciences (via Google Books)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.