Haywood Carlton, Diener-West Marie, Strouse John, Carroll C Patrick, Bediako Shawn, Lanzkron Sophie, Haythornthwaite Jennifer, Onojobi Gladys, Beach Mary Catherine
The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2014 Nov;48(5):934-43. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2014.02.002. Epub 2014 Apr 15.
Perceived discriminatory experiences in society have been associated with a higher burden of pain among some minority patient populations.
To describe the extent to which patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) perceive discrimination from health care providers and to examine the association of these experiences with the burden of chronic SCD pain.
Cross-sectional analysis of data collected at baseline of a prospective cohort study of SCD patient experiences of care (n = 291). Perceived race-based and disease-based discrimination from health care providers were measured using subscales adapted from the Interpersonal Processes of Care Survey. Discrimination scores were examined for their association with patient characteristics and measures of pain burden using descriptive, bivariate, and multivariate analytic techniques.
Respondents reported a greater burden of race-based discrimination from health care providers than has been previously reported by African Americans, and they reported a greater amount of disease-based vs. race-based discrimination. Age and having difficulty persuading providers about pain were the only patient characteristics independently associated with race-based discrimination, whereas older age, greater emergency room utilization, having difficulty persuading providers about pain, daily chronic pain, fewer good days during a week, and a higher severity of pain on their good days were independently associated with greater disease-based discrimination.
Perceived disease-based, but not race-based, discrimination was found to be associated with a greater range of self-reported pain among patients with SCD. If causal, this finding could signal an important new approach to mitigating the burden of pain experienced by persons with SCD.
社会中感知到的歧视经历与一些少数族裔患者群体中更高的疼痛负担相关。
描述镰状细胞病(SCD)患者感知来自医疗服务提供者歧视的程度,并检验这些经历与慢性SCD疼痛负担之间的关联。
对一项关于SCD患者护理经历的前瞻性队列研究基线时收集的数据(n = 291)进行横断面分析。使用从《护理人际过程调查》改编的分量表来测量患者感知到的来自医疗服务提供者基于种族和基于疾病的歧视。使用描述性、双变量和多变量分析技术,检验歧视得分与患者特征及疼痛负担测量指标之间的关联。
与非裔美国人之前报告的情况相比,受访者报告称来自医疗服务提供者基于种族的歧视负担更重,且他们报告的基于疾病的歧视比基于种族的歧视更多。年龄以及在让医疗服务提供者相信疼痛方面存在困难是仅有的与基于种族的歧视独立相关的患者特征,而年龄较大、急诊室利用率较高、在让医疗服务提供者相信疼痛方面存在困难、每日慢性疼痛、一周内状况良好的日子较少以及状况良好日子里的疼痛严重程度较高,则与更大程度的基于疾病的歧视独立相关。
研究发现,感知到的基于疾病而非基于种族的歧视与SCD患者中更多的自我报告疼痛相关。如果存在因果关系,这一发现可能预示着一种减轻SCD患者疼痛负担的重要新方法。