The Association Between Racialized Discrimination in Health Care and Pain Among Black Patients With Mental Health Diagnoses

Chronic pain is a costly and debilitating problem in the United States, and its burdens are exacerbated among socially disadvantaged and stigmatized groups. In a cross-sectional study of Black Veterans with chronic pain at the Atlanta VA Health Care System (N = 380), we used path analysis to explore...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of pain 2024-01, Vol.25 (1), p.217-227
Hauptverfasser: Hammett, Patrick J., Eliacin, Johanne, Saenger, Michael, Allen, Kelli D., Meis, Laura A., Krein, Sarah L., Taylor, Brent C., Branson, Mariah, Fu, Steven S., Burgess, Diana J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chronic pain is a costly and debilitating problem in the United States, and its burdens are exacerbated among socially disadvantaged and stigmatized groups. In a cross-sectional study of Black Veterans with chronic pain at the Atlanta VA Health Care System (N = 380), we used path analysis to explore the roles of racialized discrimination in health care settings, pain self-efficacy, and pain-related fear avoidance beliefs as potential mediators of pain outcomes among Black Veterans with and without an electronic health record-documented mental health diagnosis. In unadjusted bivariate analyses, Black Veterans with a mental health diagnosis (n = 175) reported marginally higher levels of pain-related disability and significantly higher levels of pain interference compared to those without a mental health diagnosis (n = 205). Path analyses revealed that pain-related disability, pain intensity, and pain interference were mediated by higher levels of racialized discrimination in health care and lower pain self-efficacy among Black Veterans with a mental health diagnosis. Pain-related fear avoidance beliefs did not mediate pain outcomes. These findings highlight the need to improve the quality and effectiveness of health care for Black patients with chronic pain through the implementation of antiracism interventions within health care systems. Results further suggest that Black patients with chronic pain who have a mental health diagnosis may benefit from targeted pain management strategies that focus on building self-efficacy for managing pain. Racialized health care discrimination and pain self-efficacy mediated differences in pain-related disability, pain intensity, and pain interference among Black Veterans with and without a mental health diagnosis. Findings highlight the need for antiracism interventions within health care systems in order to improve the quality of care for Black patients with chronic pain. Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01983228. •A secondary analysis of Black Veterans with chronic pain.•Path analyses explored differences in pain by mental health diagnosis.•Black Veterans with a mental health diagnosis had high levels of pain.•Pain was mediated by racialized health care discrimination and pain self-efficacy.
ISSN:1526-5900
1528-8447
1528-8447
DOI:10.1016/j.jpain.2023.08.004