Gender Role Expectations in the Context of Pain: What is the Role of Socioeconomic Status?

M. Jarego, E. Diniz, S. Bernardes, S. Mourão
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Abstract

Chronic pain has a significant impact on the overall population but does not impact all people equally. More vulnerable groups, such as women or individuals with a lower socioeconomic status (SES) revealed a higher burden of chronic pain. Gender role expectations and similar conceptualizations related to SES do not fully explain the differences in pain experiences and assessments with the literature showing incongruent results. Thus, intersectionality emerges as a valuable tool to promote the knowledge of health inequalities, by examining how multiple psychosocial factors interact to shape and influence human experience. This study aims to understand how socioeconomic status (SES) influences gender role expectations in the context of chronic pain, i.e., whether gender role expectations are different for women and men from various SES. Two-hundred and twenty-two adults (56.6% women), with an average age of 37.4 years ( SD = 14.1) were asked to imagine a (wo)men of low/medium/high SES and to imagine that persons pain. An experimental design was used to investigate the influence of an imagined persons SES on gender role expectations regarding: (a) sensitivity; (b) tolerance; and (c) willingness to express pain. Analyses of variance (ANOVA) concluded that there was a triple interaction effect between sex and SES of the person imagined and participants sex on pain tolerance, but not on sensitivity or willingness to express pain. Multiple comparison tests revealed that female tend to perceive people from lower SES as more tolerant to pain, independently of their sex, since they imagined women of medium SES and men of low SES with greater pain tolerance than imagined women and men of high SES, respectively. In opposition, male participants imagined women of every SES with the same level of pain tolerance, as well as all men with the same level of pain tolerance. However, male participants attributed different levels of pain tolerance to imagined people in the high SES condition, where the imagined woman was perceived as more tolerant of pain. These findings allow us to better understand the influence of SES on gender role expectations in the context of chronic pain.
疼痛情境下的性别角色期望:社会经济地位的作用是什么?
慢性疼痛对整个人群有重大影响,但并不是对所有人都有同等影响。更脆弱的群体,如女性或社会经济地位较低的个体,慢性疼痛的负担更高。性别角色期望和与SES相关的类似概念并不能完全解释疼痛体验和评估的差异,文献显示不一致的结果。因此,通过研究多种社会心理因素如何相互作用形成和影响人类经验,交叉性成为促进了解健康不平等的宝贵工具。本研究旨在了解慢性疼痛背景下社会经济地位(SES)如何影响性别角色期望,即不同社会经济地位的女性和男性的性别角色期望是否不同。222名平均年龄为37.4岁(SD = 14.1)的成年人(56.6%为女性)被要求想象一名(两名)低/中/高经济地位的男性,并想象他们的痛苦。本研究采用一项实验设计来研究想象人物SES对性别角色期望的影响:(a)敏感性;(b)宽容;(c)表达痛苦的意愿。方差分析(ANOVA)得出结论,性别、想象者的社会经济地位和参与者的性别对疼痛耐受性有三重交互作用,但对疼痛的敏感性和表达意愿没有交互作用。多项对比测试显示,女性倾向于认为社会经济地位较低的人更能忍受疼痛,这与性别无关,因为她们认为中等社会经济地位的女性和低社会经济地位的男性比想象中的高社会经济地位的女性和男性更能忍受疼痛。相反,男性参与者想象每个社会经济地位的女性具有相同的疼痛耐受水平,以及所有男性具有相同的疼痛耐受水平。然而,男性参与者将不同程度的疼痛耐受性归因于高SES条件下想象的人,想象中的女性被认为更能忍受疼痛。这些发现使我们能够更好地理解SES对慢性疼痛背景下性别角色期望的影响。
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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