Department of Psychology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama.
Department of Anaesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, Washington.
J Pain. 2019 Jan;20(1):83-96. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2018.08.005. Epub 2018 Sep 1.
Injustice perception has emerged as a risk factor for problematic musculoskeletal pain outcomes. Despite the prevalence and impact of chronic low back pain (CLBP), no study has addressed injustice appraisals specifically among individuals with CLBP. In addition, despite racial/ethnic disparities in pain, existing injustice research has relied almost exclusively on white/Caucasian participant samples. The current study examined the associations between perceived injustice and pain, disability, and depression in a diverse community sample of individuals with CLBP (N = 137) -51 (37.2%) white, 43 (31.4%) Hispanic, 43 (31.4%) black or African American). Anger variables were tested as potential mediators of these relationships. Controlling for demographic and pain-related covariates, perceived injustice accounted for unique variance in self-reported depression and disability outcomes, but not pain intensity. State and trait anger, and anger inhibition mediated the association between perceived injustice and depression; no additional mediation by anger was observed. Significant racial differences were also noted. Compared with white and Hispanic participants, black participants reported higher levels of perceived injustice related to CLBP, as well as higher depression and pain-related disability. Black participants also reported higher pain intensity than white participants. Current findings provide initial evidence regarding the role of injustice perception specifically in the context of CLBP and within a racially diverse participant sample. Results highlight the need for greater diversity within injustice and CLBP research as well as research regarding socially informed antecedents of injustice appraisals. Perspective: Perceived injustice predicted worse outcomes in CLBP, with effects partially mediated by anger. Black participants reported worse pain outcomes and higher injustice perception than their white or Hispanic counterparts. Given racial inequities within broader health and pain-specific outcomes, this topic is critical for CLBP and perceived injustice research.
不公正感已成为肌肉骨骼疼痛问题发生的风险因素。尽管慢性下背痛(CLBP)的普遍性和影响很大,但尚无研究专门针对 CLBP 患者的不公正评估。此外,尽管存在种族/民族之间的疼痛差异,但现有的不公正研究几乎完全依赖于白种/高加索参与者样本。本研究在 CLBP 患者的多元化社区样本中(N=137,51 名(37.2%)为白人,43 名(31.4%)为西班牙裔,43 名(31.4%)为黑人或非裔美国人),研究了感知不公正与疼痛、残疾和抑郁之间的关系。测试了愤怒变量作为这些关系的潜在中介。在控制人口统计学和与疼痛相关的协变量后,感知不公正可解释报告的抑郁和残疾结果的独特差异,但不能解释疼痛强度。状态和特质愤怒以及愤怒抑制调节了感知不公正与抑郁之间的关联;没有观察到愤怒的额外调节作用。还注意到了显著的种族差异。与白人及西班牙裔参与者相比,黑人参与者报告了与 CLBP 相关的更高水平的感知不公正,以及更高的抑郁和与疼痛相关的残疾。黑人参与者报告的疼痛强度也高于白人参与者。目前的研究结果提供了关于在 CLBP 背景下以及在种族多样化的参与者样本中,不公正感知作用的初步证据。结果强调了在不公正和 CLBP 研究中以及在有关不公正评估的社会信息前因的研究中需要更大的多样性。观点:感知不公正预测了 CLBP 的预后更差,其效应部分通过愤怒来介导。黑人参与者报告了更差的疼痛结果和更高的不公正感知,比他们的白人或西班牙裔同龄人更差。鉴于在更广泛的健康和疼痛特异性结果中存在种族不平等,这个问题对 CLBP 和感知不公正研究至关重要。