Gnall Katherine E, Hooker Julia E, Doorley James D, Bakhshaie Jafar, Vranceanu Ana-Maria
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA.
Center for Health Outcomes and Interdisciplinary Research (CHOIR), Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, One Bowdoin Square, 1st Floor, Suite 100, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
J Behav Med. 2025 Feb;48(1):176-187. doi: 10.1007/s10865-024-00522-1. Epub 2024 Oct 5.
Chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) is highly prevalent, frequently associated with negative health outcomes, and disproportionately impacts Black Americans. Perceived racial and ethnic discrimination has emerged as a factor that may influence the experience of chronic pain in this population. Identifying modifiable psychosocial factors that influence the link between perceived discrimination and pain and that can be directly targeted in treatment is vital to reducing the disproportionate burden of CMP among Black individuals. The present study examines the moderating role of five risk factors (i.e., pain avoidance, pain fusion, experiential avoidance, pain catastrophizing, and pain anxiety) on the relationship between perceived discrimination and pain outcomes (i.e., pain intensity and interference) in a sample of 401 Black adults with CMP. We recruited 401 Black individuals (M = 35.98, 51.9% female) with self-reported CMP and assessed their self-reported perceived discrimination, pain intensity, pain interference, and pain-related psychosocial risk factors. Results indicated that higher scores on each of the psychosocial risk factors (i.e., pain avoidance, pain fusion, experiential avoidance, pain catastrophizing, and pain anxiety) were significantly associated with greater pain intensity and pain interference (all ps < 0.01). Further, pain avoidance (B = 0.12, p = .006), pain fusion (B = 0.13, p = .002), and pain anxiety (B = 0.13, p = .002) each significantly moderated the relation between perceived discrimination and pain intensity. Greater perceived discrimination was associated with greater pain intensity at higher levels of avoidance and fusion, and was associated with less pain intensity at lower levels of avoidance and pain anxiety. In interaction models predicting pain interference, both pain fusion (B = 0.14, p = .001) and pain anxiety (B = 0.10, p = .01) significantly moderated the relation between perceived discrimination and pain interference. Perceived discrimination was associated with greater pain interference at higher levels of pain fusion and pain anxiety, and was not associated with pain interference at lower levels of pain fusion and pain anxiety. The present findings provide important insights into psychosocial risk factors that moderate the link between perceived discrimination and pain outcomes, providing important clinical implications for the treatment of Black adults with chronic musculoskeletal pain.
慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛(CMP)非常普遍,常与负面健康结果相关,且对美国黑人的影响尤为严重。种族和民族歧视已成为可能影响该人群慢性疼痛体验的一个因素。识别可改变的心理社会因素,这些因素会影响感知到的歧视与疼痛之间的联系,并且可以在治疗中直接针对这些因素,对于减轻黑人个体中CMP不成比例的负担至关重要。本研究在401名患有CMP的黑人成年人样本中,考察了五个风险因素(即疼痛回避、疼痛融合、经验回避、疼痛灾难化和疼痛焦虑)在感知到的歧视与疼痛结果(即疼痛强度和干扰)之间关系中的调节作用。我们招募了401名自我报告患有CMP的黑人个体(M = 35.98,51.9%为女性),并评估了他们自我报告的感知到的歧视、疼痛强度、疼痛干扰以及与疼痛相关的心理社会风险因素。结果表明,每个心理社会风险因素(即疼痛回避、疼痛融合、经验回避、疼痛灾难化和疼痛焦虑)得分越高,与更大的疼痛强度和疼痛干扰显著相关(所有p值均<0.01)。此外,疼痛回避(B = 0.12,p = 0.006)、疼痛融合(B = 0.13,p = 0.002)和疼痛焦虑(B = 0.13,p = 0.002)均显著调节了感知到的歧视与疼痛强度之间的关系。在更高水平的回避和融合情况下,更大的感知到的歧视与更大的疼痛强度相关,而在较低水平的回避和疼痛焦虑情况下,与较小的疼痛强度相关。在预测疼痛干扰的交互模型中,疼痛融合(B = 0.14,p = 0.001)和疼痛焦虑(B = 0.10,p = 0.01)均显著调节了感知到的歧视与疼痛干扰之间的关系。在更高水平的疼痛融合和疼痛焦虑情况下,感知到的歧视与更大的疼痛干扰相关,而在较低水平的疼痛融合和疼痛焦虑情况下,与疼痛干扰无关。本研究结果为调节感知到的歧视与疼痛结果之间联系的心理社会风险因素提供了重要见解,为治疗患有慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛的黑人成年人提供了重要的临床启示。