Health Care Discrimination Affects Patient Activation, Communication Self-Efficacy, and Pain for Black Americans

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-08-28 DOI:10.1016/j.jpain.2024.104663
Veronica Derricks , Adam T. Hirsh , Anthony J. Perkins , Joanne K. Daggy , Marianne S. Matthias
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Abstract

This study examines whether a key psychosocial factor—perceiving racial discrimination in health care—is associated with worse patient activation, communication self-efficacy, and physical health outcomes for Black veterans with chronic pain. Moreover, we explore the role of physician-patient working alliance as a moderator that may alleviate the potential consequences of perceiving racial discrimination. This work is a secondary analysis of baseline data from a clinical trial with 250 U.S. Black veterans with chronic musculoskeletal pain. Participants were recruited from primary care clinics at a Midwestern VA hospital between 2018 and 2021. Perceiving racial discrimination in health care was associated with lower patient activation, lower self-efficacy in communicating with one’s physician, higher pain intensity, and lower pain management self-efficacy (ps < .049) but was unrelated to reports of pain interference or use of pain coping strategies (ps > .157). Although the relationship between perceived discrimination and patient activation was moderated by working alliance (P = .014), having a stronger working alliance improved patient activation to varying degrees across levels of perceived discrimination (rather than buffering against negative outcomes when perceiving higher levels of discrimination). Moderation was not significant on any other measures. This study deepens our understanding of the broad range of health outcomes that are (not) associated with perceiving racial discrimination in health care. Contrary to prior theorizing, this work also indicates that having a strong working alliance does not attenuate the consequences of perceiving discrimination among Black individuals living with pain. These results highlight the need for system-level interventions to address perceptions of racial mistreatment in health care.

Perspective

This work has important public health implications by identifying the broad range of outcomes associated with perceived discrimination in health care among Black Americans. Importantly, a strong physician-patient relationship did not buffer Black individuals from the consequences of perceiving discrimination. These findings inform intervention targets to mitigate racial health disparities.
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医疗歧视影响美国黑人患者的积极性、沟通自我效能感和疼痛。
本研究探讨了一个关键的社会心理因素--认为医疗保健中存在种族歧视--是否与患有慢性疼痛的黑人退伍军人较差的患者激活、沟通自我效能和身体健康结果有关。此外,我们还探讨了医患工作联盟作为调节因子的作用,它可能会减轻感受到的种族歧视的潜在后果。这项研究是对 250 名患有慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛的美国黑人退伍军人的临床试验基线数据进行的二次分析。参与者是在 2018-2021 年间从美国中西部一家退伍军人医院的初级保健诊所招募的。感知到医疗保健中的种族歧视与较低的患者激活度、较低的与医生沟通的自我效能、较高的疼痛强度和较低的疼痛管理自我效能相关(ps.157)。虽然感知到的歧视与患者积极性之间的关系受到工作联盟的调节(P =.014),但在不同程度的感知到的歧视中,拥有更强的工作联盟会在不同程度上提高患者的积极性(而不是在感知到更高程度的歧视时缓冲负面结果)。其他测量指标的调节作用均不显著。这项研究加深了我们对与医疗保健中的种族歧视相关(不相关)的一系列健康结果的理解。与之前的理论研究相反,这项研究还表明,拥有强大的工作联盟并不会减轻黑人疼痛患者感受到歧视的后果。这些结果突出表明,有必要采取系统层面的干预措施来解决医疗保健中的种族虐待问题。观点:这项研究通过确定与美国黑人在医疗保健中感知到的歧视有关的广泛结果,对公共卫生产生了重要影响。重要的是,拥有牢固的医患关系并不能使黑人免受歧视后果的影响。这些发现为减轻种族健康差异的干预目标提供了依据。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pain
Journal of Pain 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
7.50%
发文量
441
审稿时长
42 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pain publishes original articles related to all aspects of pain, including clinical and basic research, patient care, education, and health policy. Articles selected for publication in the Journal are most commonly reports of original clinical research or reports of original basic research. In addition, invited critical reviews, including meta analyses of drugs for pain management, invited commentaries on reviews, and exceptional case studies are published in the Journal. The mission of the Journal is to improve the care of patients in pain by providing a forum for clinical researchers, basic scientists, clinicians, and other health professionals to publish original research.
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