Documenting Race and Gender Biases in Pain Assessment and a Novel Intervention Designed to Reduce Biases

被引:1
|
作者
Ruben, Mollie A. [1 ]
Stosic, Morgan D. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Psychol, Kingston, RI USA
[2] Univ Maine, Dept Psychol, Orono, ME USA
来源
JOURNAL OF PAIN | 2024年 / 25卷 / 09期
关键词
Pain assessment; biases; race; gender; training; AFRICAN-AMERICANS; RACIAL BIAS; ACCURATE PERCEPTION; EMOTION RECOGNITION; DISPARITIES; ETHNICITY; PATIENT; SENSITIVITY; MANAGEMENT; PRESCRIPTIONS;
D O I
10.1016/j.jpain.2024.104550
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Disparities in pain care are well-documented such that women and people of color have their pain undertreated and underestimated compared to men and White people. One of the contributors of the undertreatment of pain for people of color and women may be the inaccurate assessment of pain. Understanding the pain assessment process is an important step in evaluating the magnitude of and intervening on pain disparities in care. In the current work, we focus on documenting intersectional race and gender biases in pain assessment and present the results of a novel intervention for reducing these biases. Across 3 studies (N = 532) and a mini meta-analysis using real videotaped people in pain as stimuli, we demonstrate that observers disproportionately underestimated women of color's pain compared to all other groups (men of color, White women, and White men). In study 3 (N = 232), we show that a novel intervention focused on behavioral skill building (ie, practice and immediate feedback) significantly reduced observers' pain assessment biases toward marginalized groups compared to all other types of trainings (raising awareness of societal biases, raising awareness of self-biases, and a control condition). While it is an open question as to how long this type of intervention lasts, behavioral skills building around assessing marginalized people's pain more accurately is a promising training tool for health care professionals. Perspective: This article demonstrates the underestimation of pain among people of color and women. We also found support that a novel intervention reduced observers' pain assessment biases toward marginalized groups. This could be used in medical education or clinical care to reduce intersectional pain care disparities. (c) 2024 (c) Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Gender differences in the psychological effect of a psychoeducational intervention designed to improve cancer pain management.
    Edrington, J
    Miaskowski, C
    West, C
    Dodd, M
    ONCOLOGY NURSING FORUM, 2005, 32 (01) : 156 - 156
  • [42] Excess of non-right-handedness in schizophrenia: meta-analysis of gender effects and potential biases in handedness assessment
    Hirnstein, Marco
    Hugdahl, Kenneth
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2014, 205 (04) : 260 - +
  • [43] Testing Predictive Biases at the Intersection of Race-Ethnicity and Sex: A Multi-Site Evaluation of a Pretrial Risk Assessment Tool
    Demichele, Matthew
    Silver, Ian A.
    Labrecque, Ryan M.
    Dawes, Debbie
    Lattimore, Pamela K.
    Tueller, Stephen
    CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND BEHAVIOR, 2024, 51 (06) : 850 - 875
  • [44] School-Related Attentional Biases in Pediatric Chronic Pain: Initial Development and Validation of a Novel Attentional Bias Task
    Jastrowski, K.
    Gibler, R.
    Beckmann, E.
    Lynch-Jordan, A.
    Kashikar-Zuck, S.
    JOURNAL OF PAIN, 2017, 18 (04): : S41 - S41
  • [45] At the intersection of humanity and technology: a technofeminist intersectional critical discourse analysis of gender and race biases in the natural language processing model GPT-3
    Palacios Barea, M. A.
    Boeren, D.
    Ferreira Goncalves, J. F.
    AI & SOCIETY, 2023, 40 (2) : 461 - 479
  • [46] The Forward Movement: Amplifying Black Voices on Race and Orthopaedics-Can Orthopaedics Move Beyond Historic Biases in Black Patient Pain Perception?
    Owusu-Akyaw, Kwadwo
    CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH, 2022, 480 (05) : 870 - 871
  • [47] Gender biases in the training methods of affective computing: Redesign and validation of the Self-Assessment Manikin in measuring emotions via audiovisual clips
    Sainz-de-Baranda Andujar, Clara
    Gutierrez-Martin, Laura
    Miranda-Calero, Jose Angel
    Blanco-Ruiz, Marian
    Lopez-Ongil, Celia
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [48] Assessment and Treatment Recommendations for Pediatric Pain: The Influence of Patient Race, Patient Gender, and Provider Pain-Related Attitudes
    Miller, Megan M.
    Williams, Amy E.
    Zapolski, Tamika C. B.
    Rand, Kevin L.
    Hirsh, Adam T.
    JOURNAL OF PAIN, 2020, 21 (1-2): : 225 - 237
  • [49] A novel scaling methodology to reduce the biases associated with missing data from commercial activity monitors (vol 15, e0235144, 2020)
    O'Driscoll, R.
    Turicchi, J.
    Duarte, C.
    Michalowska, J.
    Larsen, S. C.
    Palmeira, A. L.
    Heitmann, B. L.
    Horgan, G. W.
    Stubbs, R. J.
    PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (09):
  • [50] Assessment of Contamination and Misclassification Biases in a Randomized Controlled Trial of a Social Network Peer Education Intervention to Reduce HIV risk Behaviors Among Drug Users and Risk Partners in Philadelphia, PA and Chiang Mai, Thailand
    Simmons, Nicole
    Donnell, Deborah
    Ou, San-san
    Celentano, David D.
    Aramrattana, Apinun
    Davis-Vogel, Annet
    Metzger, David
    Latkin, Carl
    AIDS AND BEHAVIOR, 2015, 19 (10) : 1818 - 1827