Discrimination and wellbeing are differentially related to pain severity for the racially marginalized.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain Medicine Pub Date : 2025-09-01 DOI:10.1093/pm/pnaf039
Annwesha Dasgupta, Destiny M B Printz Pereira, Sergio R Pérez Rosal, Sonya C Faber, Monnica T Williams
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: This study examines the relationship between racial discrimination and physical pain outcomes.

Methods: A geographically representative sample of 887 individuals was recruited online through CloudResearch from diverse racial backgrounds, including Black/African American, Latine/Hispanic American, Asian American, and White/European American adults. Participants completed measures on racial and ethnic discrimination, racial microaggressions, pain severity, depression symptoms, and coping styles. Statistical analyses included multiple regression and mediation models.

Results: Our findings indicate that racialized participants experienced greater ethnic discrimination and racial microaggressions compared to their non-Hispanic White counterparts. Hispanic/Latine participants also reported greater pain severity than other groups. Lifetime experiences of discrimination, depression symptoms, avoidant coping style, and age emerged as significant predictors of pain severity, while mediation analyses revealed that lifetime discrimination partially mediated the relationship between race/ethnicity and pain severity for racially marginalized participants, compared to non-Hispanic White participants. Furthermore, greater reliance on avoidant coping combined with greater lifetime discrimination experiences was associated with increased severity of pain.

Conclusions: The findings indicate how racism may result in worse pain outcomes in people of color, with potentially amplified adverse effects for those who engage in avoidant coping. While therapeutic interventions targeting avoidance may benefit racialized individuals, ultimately, the results highlight the critical need for large-scale policy interventions targeting racial discrimination to improve health equity and reduce the burden of pain among racialized populations.

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歧视和幸福感与种族边缘人群的疼痛严重程度存在差异。
目的:探讨种族歧视与躯体疼痛预后的关系。方法:通过CloudResearch在线招募具有地理代表性的887人样本,他们来自不同的种族背景,包括黑人/非裔美国人、拉丁裔/西班牙裔美国人、亚裔美国人和白人/欧洲裔美国人。参与者完成了种族和民族歧视、种族微侵犯、疼痛严重程度、抑郁症状和应对方式的测量。统计分析包括多元回归和中介模型。结果:我们的研究结果表明,与非西班牙裔白人相比,种族化的参与者经历了更大的种族歧视和种族微侵犯。西班牙裔/拉丁裔参与者也报告了比其他组更严重的疼痛。终生歧视经历、抑郁症状、回避型应对方式和年龄成为疼痛严重程度的重要预测因素,而中介分析显示,与非西班牙裔白人参与者相比,终生歧视部分介导了种族/民族与种族和疼痛严重程度之间的关系。此外,对回避型应对的依赖程度越高,终生遭受歧视的经历越多,疼痛的严重程度就越高。结论:研究结果表明,种族主义可能会导致有色人种更严重的疼痛结果,对那些从事回避应对的人可能会产生更大的不利影响。虽然针对避免的治疗干预可能有利于种族化的个体,但最终,结果强调了针对种族歧视的大规模政策干预的迫切需要,以改善健康公平并减轻种族化人群的痛苦负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Pain Medicine
Pain Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
3.20%
发文量
187
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Pain Medicine is a multi-disciplinary journal dedicated to pain clinicians, educators and researchers with an interest in pain from various medical specialties such as pain medicine, anaesthesiology, family practice, internal medicine, neurology, neurological surgery, orthopaedic spine surgery, psychiatry, and rehabilitation medicine as well as related health disciplines such as psychology, neuroscience, nursing, nurse practitioner, physical therapy, and integrative health.
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