Over 50 years of research on social disparities in pain and pain treatment: a scoping review of reviews.

IF 5.9 1区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk,Rui Huang,Chang Yu,Yu-An Chen,Sirat Kaur,Merita Limani,Ting-Hui Lin,Anna Zajacova,Zachary Zimmer,Penney Cowan,Roger B Fillingim,Jennifer S Gewandter,Ian Gilron,Adam T Hirsh,Gary J Macfarlane,Salimah H Meghani,Kushang V Patel,Ellen L Poleshuck,Eric C Strain,Frank J Symons,Ursula Wesselmann,Robert H Dworkin,Dennis C Turk
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Research on social disparities in pain and pain treatment has grown substantially in recent decades, as reflected in a growing number of review articles on these topics. This scoping review of reviews provides a macrolevel overview of scholarship in this area by examining what specific topics and findings have been presented in published reviews. We searched CINAHL, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Embase, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Web of Science for English-language, peer-reviewed review articles, qualitative or quantitative, that aimed to characterize or explain pain-related differences or inequities across social groups. Of 4432 unique records screened, 397 articles, published over a 56-year period, were included. For each, we documented (1) axes of social difference studied (eg, sex/gender, race/ethnicity), (2) pain-related outcomes (eg, chronic pain prevalence), (3) broad findings, (4) types of mechanisms proposed, and (5) policy or practice recommendations. Findings reveal a sharp increase in the number of published review articles on pain-related disparities since approximately the year 2000. The most commonly studied social dimension was sex/gender, followed by race/ethnicity and age. Studies examining disparities by socioeconomic status, geography, or other categories were rarer. While most findings showed disadvantaged social groups to have worse pain outcomes, there were intriguing exceptions. Biological, psychological, and sociocultural mechanisms were considered much more frequently than sociostructural (macrolevel) ones. Policy/practice recommendations were typically individual-level behavioral suggestions for providers or patients. We identify high-priority areas for future research, including greater attention to lower-income countries, chronic pain prevention, and macrolevel drivers of pain disparities.
50多年来关于疼痛和疼痛治疗的社会差异的研究:综述的范围综述。
近几十年来,关于疼痛和疼痛治疗的社会差异的研究有了实质性的增长,这反映在越来越多的关于这些主题的评论文章中。这篇综述的范围综述通过检查发表的综述中提出的具体主题和发现,提供了该领域学术的宏观概述。我们检索了CINAHL、Cochrane系统评价数据库、Embase、PsycINFO、PubMed和Web of Science,检索了旨在描述或解释社会群体中与疼痛相关的差异或不公平现象的定性或定量的、同行评议的英文评论文章。在筛选的4432份独特记录中,包括了56年间发表的397篇文章。对于每一个,我们记录了(1)研究的社会差异轴(例如,性别/性别,种族/民族),(2)疼痛相关结果(例如,慢性疼痛患病率),(3)广泛的发现,(4)提出的机制类型,(5)政策或实践建议。研究结果显示,大约自2000年以来,发表的关于疼痛相关差异的评论文章数量急剧增加。最常被研究的社会维度是性/性别,其次是种族/民族和年龄。通过社会经济地位、地理位置或其他类别来检查差异的研究很少。虽然大多数研究结果表明,弱势社会群体的疼痛程度更严重,但也有一些有趣的例外。生物、心理和社会文化机制比社会结构(宏观层面)机制更常被考虑。政策/实践建议通常是针对提供者或患者的个人层面的行为建议。我们确定了未来研究的高优先领域,包括更多地关注低收入国家、慢性疼痛预防和疼痛差异的宏观层面驱动因素。
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®
PAIN® 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
8.10%
发文量
242
审稿时长
9 months
期刊介绍: PAIN® is the official publication of the International Association for the Study of Pain and publishes original research on the nature,mechanisms and treatment of pain.PAIN® provides a forum for the dissemination of research in the basic and clinical sciences of multidisciplinary interest.
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