In medicine we try to make people rate their symptoms, like pain, from one to ten. It’s pretty much never under 5.
This is actually what initially got me thinking about this. I read a half-satire thing about people misusing pain scales. Since my only source for the claim that people do this was a somewhat satirical article, I didn’t bring it up initially.
I was surprised when I heard that people do this, because I figured most people getting asked that question aren’t in near as much pain as they could be, and they don’t have much to gain by inflating their answer. When I’ve been asked to give an answer on the pain scale, I’ve almost always felt like I’m much closer to no pain than to “the worst pain I can imagine” (which is what I was told a ten is), and I can imagine being in such awful pain that I can’t answer the question. I think I answered seven one time when I had a bone sticking through my skin (which actually hurt less than I might have thought).
most people getting asked that question aren’t in near as much pain as they could be, and they don’t have much to gain by inflating their answer.
Maybe they think that by inflating their answer they gain, on the margin, better / more intensive / more prompt medical service. Especially in an ER setting where they may intuit themselves to be competing against other patients being triaged and asked the same question, they might perceive themselves (consciously or not) to be in an arms race where the person who claims to be experiencing the most pain gets treated first.
This is actually what initially got me thinking about this. I read a half-satire thing about people misusing pain scales. Since my only source for the claim that people do this was a somewhat satirical article, I didn’t bring it up initially.
I was surprised when I heard that people do this, because I figured most people getting asked that question aren’t in near as much pain as they could be, and they don’t have much to gain by inflating their answer. When I’ve been asked to give an answer on the pain scale, I’ve almost always felt like I’m much closer to no pain than to “the worst pain I can imagine” (which is what I was told a ten is), and I can imagine being in such awful pain that I can’t answer the question. I think I answered seven one time when I had a bone sticking through my skin (which actually hurt less than I might have thought).
Maybe they think that by inflating their answer they gain, on the margin, better / more intensive / more prompt medical service. Especially in an ER setting where they may intuit themselves to be competing against other patients being triaged and asked the same question, they might perceive themselves (consciously or not) to be in an arms race where the person who claims to be experiencing the most pain gets treated first.