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记录疼痛评估中的种族和性别偏见及旨在减少偏见的新干预措施。

Documenting Race and Gender Biases in Pain Assessment and a Novel Intervention Designed to Reduce Biases.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island.

Department of Psychology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine.

出版信息

J Pain. 2024 Sep;25(9):104550. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2024.104550. Epub 2024 Apr 29.

Abstract

Disparities in pain care are well-documented such that women and people of color have their pain undertreated and underestimated compared to men and White people. One of the contributors of the undertreatment of pain for people of color and women may be the inaccurate assessment of pain. Understanding the pain assessment process is an important step in evaluating the magnitude of and intervening on pain disparities in care. In the current work, we focus on documenting intersectional race and gender biases in pain assessment and present the results of a novel intervention for reducing these biases. Across 3 studies (N = 532) and a mini meta-analysis using real videotaped people in pain as stimuli, we demonstrate that observers disproportionately underestimated women of color's pain compared to all other groups (men of color, White women, and White men). In study 3 (N = 232), we show that a novel intervention focused on behavioral skill building (ie, practice and immediate feedback) significantly reduced observers' pain assessment biases toward marginalized groups compared to all other types of trainings (raising awareness of societal biases, raising awareness of self-biases, and a control condition). While it is an open question as to how long this type of intervention lasts, behavioral skills building around assessing marginalized people's pain more accurately is a promising training tool for health care professionals. PERSPECTIVE: This article demonstrates the underestimation of pain among people of color and women. We also found support that a novel intervention reduced observers' pain assessment biases toward marginalized groups. This could be used in medical education or clinical care to reduce intersectional pain care disparities.

摘要

疼痛护理方面的差异是有据可查的,与男性和白人相比,女性和有色人种的疼痛治疗不足且被低估。导致有色人种和女性疼痛治疗不足的原因之一可能是对疼痛的评估不准确。了解疼痛评估过程是评估护理中疼痛差异程度和干预疼痛差异的重要步骤。在当前的工作中,我们专注于记录疼痛评估中的交叉种族和性别偏见,并介绍一种减少这些偏见的新干预措施的结果。通过 3 项研究(N=532)和一项使用真实疼痛录像作为刺激的小型荟萃分析,我们证明观察者对有色人种女性的疼痛评估不成比例地低于所有其他群体(有色人种男性、白人女性和白人男性)。在研究 3(N=232)中,我们表明,一种新的干预措施侧重于行为技能培养(即练习和即时反馈),与所有其他类型的培训(提高对社会偏见的认识、提高对自我偏见的认识和控制条件)相比,显著减少了观察者对边缘化群体的疼痛评估偏见。虽然这种干预能持续多久还存在疑问,但围绕更准确地评估边缘化人群的疼痛而进行的行为技能培养是医疗保健专业人员的一种有前途的培训工具。观点:本文证明了对有色人种和女性的疼痛的低估。我们还发现,一种新的干预措施可以减少观察者对边缘化群体的疼痛评估偏见。这可以在医学教育或临床护理中用于减少交叉疼痛护理差异。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/8541/11793930/471c564d1d57/nihms-2048242-f0001.jpg

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