Department of Anesthesiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, 200 First St SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Pain Med. 2012 Nov;13(11):1499-508. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4637.2012.01489.x. Epub 2012 Sep 19.
The primary aim of this study was to determine if the immediate outcomes of multidisciplinary pain rehabilitation were different for African Americans compared with Caucasians.
A retrospective repeated measures design was used, and all analyses were adjusted for marital and employment status, years of education, and pain duration.
Multidisciplinary pain rehabilitation center.
Each African American (N = 40) consecutively admitted to a multidisciplinary pain rehabilitation program was matched with three Caucasians (N = 120) on age, sex, and treatment dates.
A 3-week outpatient multidisciplinary pain rehabilitation program.
The Multidimensional Pain Inventory, Short Form-36 Health Status Questionnaire, Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression scale, and Pain Catastrophizing Scale were administered at admission and dismissal.
At baseline, African Americans had greater pain severity (P < 0.001) and poorer physical function compared with Caucasians (P < 0.001). At program completion, African Americans had greater pain severity (P < 0.001) and poorer measures of life interference (P = 0.004), perceived control (P = 0.013), affective distress (P < 0.001), role physical (P = 0.001) and role emotional function (P = 0.001), physical (P < 0.001) and social function (P = 0.002), general health (P = 0.005), depression (P < 0.001), and pain catastrophizing (P < 0.001). A repeated measures analysis demonstrated a time by race interaction effect for pain interference (P = 0.038), affective distress (P = 0.019), role physical function (P = 0.007), social function (P = 0.029), and depression (P = 0.004), indicating African Americans experienced less improvement compared with Caucasians.
The results of this study highlight an under-recognized health disparity which provides the basis for developing targeted interventions aimed at improving the clinical outcomes of African Americans with chronic pain.
本研究的主要目的是确定与白人相比,非裔美国人在多学科疼痛康复治疗中的即时治疗效果是否存在差异。
采用回顾性重复测量设计,所有分析均根据婚姻和就业状况、受教育年限和疼痛持续时间进行调整。
多学科疼痛康复中心。
每一位连续进入多学科疼痛康复项目的非裔美国人(n=40),均按照年龄、性别和治疗日期与三名白人(n=120)相匹配。
为期 3 周的门诊多学科疼痛康复计划。
入院和出院时使用多维疼痛清单、SF-36 健康状况调查问卷、流行病学研究中心抑郁量表和疼痛灾难化量表进行评估。
在基线时,非裔美国人的疼痛严重程度(P<0.001)和身体功能(P<0.001)均比白人差。在治疗结束时,非裔美国人的疼痛严重程度(P<0.001)和生活干扰(P=0.004)、感知控制(P=0.013)、情感困扰(P<0.001)、身体角色(P=0.001)和情绪角色功能(P=0.001)、身体功能(P<0.001)和社会功能(P=0.002)、总体健康(P=0.005)、抑郁(P<0.001)和疼痛灾难化(P<0.001)等指标的测量结果均更差。重复测量分析显示,疼痛干扰(P=0.038)、情感困扰(P=0.019)、身体角色功能(P=0.007)、社会功能(P=0.029)和抑郁(P=0.004)存在时间与种族的交互效应,表明与白人相比,非裔美国人的改善程度较小。
本研究结果突显了一个尚未得到充分认识的健康差异,为制定有针对性的干预措施提供了依据,旨在改善非裔美国人慢性疼痛患者的临床治疗效果。