Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2018
In December 1950, Salter's valuable book What is Hypnosis? (1) was published in England, and some months earlier Strauss (2) had pointed out the wide implications for medicine of Salter's observations, were they confirmed, and indicated the more resistant nature of psychogenic pain, compared with organic pain, to amelioration by hypnotic suggestion. The present article reviews three very different cases in which, at some stage in treatment, an autohypnotic approach to pain was used, and a further case in which autohypnosis, as a means of relief of pain, had been discovered accidentally by the patient. An attempt is made to relate the results and information obtained from these cases to Salter's work and views on hypnosis.
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