Terry Ellen L, Fullwood M Dottington, Booker Staja Q, Cardoso Josue S, Sibille Kimberly T, Glover Toni L, Thompson Kathryn A, Addison Adriana S, Goodin Burel R, Staud Roland, Hughes Laura B, Bradley Laurence A, Redden David T, Bartley Emily J, Fillingim Roger B
Department of Biobehavioral Nursing Science, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States.
Department of Aging and Geriatric Research, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States.
J Pain Res. 2020 May 1;13:883-895. doi: 10.2147/JPR.S235632. eCollection 2020.
Research indicates pain-related disparities in the impact of knee osteoarthritis (OA) across both sex and ethnicity/race. While several factors likely contribute to these disparities, experiences of discrimination are associated with poor OA-related pain, disability, and functional performance. However, the mechanisms that mediate experiences of discrimination and OA-related outcomes are unclear. The current cross-sectional study examined the associations between everyday experiences of discrimination and clinical pain, disability and functional performance among non-Hispanic Black (NHB) and non-Hispanic White (NHW) persons with or at risk of knee OA and assessed the serial mediated model of perceived stress and pain catastrophizing on these relationships in women only.
Participants were 188 community-dwelling adults who presented with unilateral or bilateral knee pain and screened positive for clinical knee pain. Participants completed several measures including experiences of discrimination, Perceived Stress Scale, Coping Strategies Questionnaire-Revised (CSQ-R): Pain Catastrophizing subscale, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), Graded Chronic Pain Scale (GCPS), and Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB).
As compared to NHW participants, NHB individuals reported experiencing significantly higher levels of discrimination ((1, 175)=26.660, <0.001), greater levels of pain catastrophizing ((1, 180)=12.919, <0.001), higher levels of clinical pain and disability, and lower levels of physical function (s<0.05). However, perceived stress was positively correlated with discrimination in the NHW group only (NHW females: =0.40, <0.01; NHW males: =0.37, <0.05). Further, perceived stress and pain catastrophizing mediated the relationship between discrimination and outcome variables (WOMAC pain, GCPS interference [pain disability], and SPPB function) in female participants after controlling for relevant sociodemographic variables (study site, age, race, income, and body mass index).
These results may have implications for the treatment of perceived stress and catastrophizing as a means to reduce the negative impact of experiences of discrimination on the experience of chronic pain, particularly for women.
研究表明,膝关节骨关节炎(OA)在性别和种族方面存在与疼痛相关的差异。虽然可能有多种因素导致这些差异,但歧视经历与OA相关的疼痛、残疾及功能表现不佳有关。然而,介导歧视经历与OA相关结果的机制尚不清楚。当前的横断面研究调查了非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)和非西班牙裔白人(NHW)中患有膝关节OA或有患膝关节OA风险的人群日常歧视经历与临床疼痛、残疾及功能表现之间的关联,并仅在女性中评估了感知压力和疼痛灾难化在这些关系中的序列中介模型。
参与者为188名社区居住成年人,他们存在单侧或双侧膝关节疼痛,且临床膝关节疼痛筛查呈阳性。参与者完成了多项测量,包括歧视经历、感知压力量表、应对策略问卷修订版(CSQ-R):疼痛灾难化子量表、西安大略和麦克马斯特大学骨关节炎指数(WOMAC)、慢性疼痛分级量表(GCPS)以及简短身体功能测试电池(SPPB)。
与NHW参与者相比,NHB个体报告的歧视水平显著更高((1, 175)=26.660,<0.001),疼痛灾难化程度更高((1, 180)=12.919,<0.001),临床疼痛和残疾水平更高,身体功能水平更低(s<0.05)。然而,仅在NHW组中,感知压力与歧视呈正相关(NHW女性:=0.40,<0.01;NHW男性:=0.37,<0.05)。此外,在控制了相关社会人口统计学变量(研究地点、年龄、种族、收入和体重指数)后,感知压力和疼痛灾难化在女性参与者中介导了歧视与结果变量(WOMAC疼痛、GCPS干扰[疼痛残疾]和SPPB功能)之间的关系。
这些结果可能对将感知压力和灾难化作为减少歧视经历对慢性疼痛体验负面影响的一种手段进行治疗具有启示意义,尤其是对女性而言。