加拿大成年人疼痛的种族差异。

IF 2 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Merita Limani, Anna Zajacova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:了解疼痛差异对于促进卫生公平和指导有效的卫生政策至关重要。然而,我们对加拿大成年人疼痛的种族差异知之甚少。目的:我们提供了一个全面的分析在加拿大成年人的疼痛种族/民族差异,重点在疼痛的两个维度-频繁疼痛和干扰性疼痛。方法:我们使用了2020年和2022年从居住在加拿大的4,637名18岁及以上成年人的代表性样本中收集的两波横断面数据。我们计算了白人、黑人、东亚/东南亚、南亚、土著、多种族和“其他”群体的疼痛患病率,并估计了在多变量框架中调整关键协变量后的相对差异。结果:数据显示疼痛差异大且具有统计学意义;然而,具体的模式因两种疼痛结果和性别而异。加拿大原住民的频繁疼痛(38.4%)和干扰性疼痛(27.8%)的患病率相对较高,而东亚/东南亚加拿大人的这两种患病率最低(分别为8.2%和14.4%)。加拿大黑人频繁疼痛的患病率相对较低(16.9%),但干扰性疼痛的患病率非常高(27.8%)。协变量与疼痛程度有关,但与疼痛的种族/民族模式关系不大。结论:我们的分析强调了加拿大成年人疼痛患病率的种族差异。为了更好地了解观察到的差异的根本原因,并最终改善患有疼痛的加拿大人的生活,进一步的研究是必不可少的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Racial/ethnic disparities in pain among Canadian adults.

Background: Understanding pain disparities is critical for fostering health equity and guiding effective health policies. However, little is known about racial/ethnic disparities in pain among adults in Canada.

Aims: We provide a comprehensive analysis of racial/ethnic disparities in pain among Canadian adults, focusing on two dimensions of pain - frequent pain and interfering pain.

Methods: We use two-wave cross-sectional data collected in 2020 and 2022 from a representative sample of 4,637 adults aged 18 and older residing in Canada. We calculate the prevalence of pain among White, Black, East/Southeast Asian, South Asian, Indigenous, Multiracial, and "Other" groups and estimate relative differences adjusted for key covariates in a multivariable framework.

Results: The data reveal large and statistically significant pain disparities; specific patterns, however, vary across the two pain outcomes and by gender. Indigenous Canadians have relatively high prevalence of both frequent pain (38.4%) and interfering pain (27.8%), while East/Southeast Asian Canadians have the lowest prevalence of both (8.2% and 14.4%, respectively). Black Canadians have a relatively low prevalence of frequent pain (16.9%) but a very high prevalence of interfering pain (27.8%). Covariates are associated with pain levels but less so with the racial/ethnic patterns in pain.

Conclusions: Our analysis highlights substantial racial/ethnic disparities in pain prevalence among Canadian adults. Further research is essential to better understand the root causes of the observed disparities and ultimately improve the lives of Canadians living with pain.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
12.50%
发文量
36
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