以正念为基础的慢性疼痛综合医疗小组访问干预的种族反应差异。

Global advances in integrative medicine and health Pub Date : 2024-05-16 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/27536130241254793
Angela C Incollingo Rodriguez, Benjamin C Nephew, Justin J Polcari, Veronica Melican, Jean A King, Paula Gardiner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:慢性疼痛是利用医疗保健的最常见驱动因素之一,也是健康差异的一个显著领域,因为非裔美国人/黑人的慢性疼痛发病率很高。综合医疗小组访问(IMGV)结合了正念技术、循证综合医学和医疗小组访问。在一项家长随机对照试验中,这种方法作为一种辅助治疗方法,对患有慢性疼痛和抑郁症的多样化、医疗服务不足的人群进行了测试:确定基于正念的慢性疼痛治疗效果的种族异质性:本研究对母体试验进行了二次分析,评估了在患有慢性疼痛和抑郁症的不同种族样本中,根据患者报告的主要疼痛结果,治疗效果在种族身份上的异质性。分析方法检查了不同种族群体之间的合并症和社会人口统计学特征。RMANOVAs 研究了在干预和对照条件下,非裔美国人/黑人(n = 90)与白人(n = 29)之间在三个时间点(基线、9 周和 21 周)的疼痛结果(平均疼痛、疼痛严重程度和疼痛干扰)的轨迹:基线时,非裔美国人/黑人参与者的疼痛严重程度较高,年龄、工作状况和合并症情况也有显著差异。RMANOVA 模型还发现,在对母体 IMGV 干预的反应中,种族差异也很明显。在 IMGV 条件下,非裔美国人/黑人受试者的疼痛严重程度从基线到 9 周都有所减轻。白人受试者在这段时间内没有观察到这种变化。然而,在随后的9周至21周期间,白人受试者的疼痛严重程度有所减轻,而IMGV在非裔美国人/黑人受试者中没有明显效果:疼痛与种族化之间的相互作用需要进一步调查,以了解基于种族的慢性疼痛综合医学治疗反应的异质性如何导致更广泛的健康不公平现象。
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Race-Based Differences in the Response to a Mindfulness Based Integrative Medical Group Visit Intervention for Chronic Pain.

Background: Chronic pain is one of the most common drivers of healthcare utilization and a marked domain for health disparities, as African American/Black populations experience high rates of chronic pain. Integrative Medical Group Visits (IMGV) combine mindfulness techniques, evidence-based integrative medicine, and medical group visits. In a parent randomized controlled trial, this approach was tested as an adjunct treatment in a diverse, medically underserved population with chronic pain and depression.

Objective: To determine race-based heterogeneity in the effects of a mindfulness based treatment for chronic pain.

Methods: This secondary analysis of the parent trial assessed heterogeneity of treatment effects along racialized identity in terms of primary patient-reported pain outcomes in a racially diverse sample suffering from chronic pain and depression. The analytic approach examined comorbidities and sociodemographics between racialized groups. RMANOVAs examined trajectories in pain outcomes (average pain, pain severity, and pain interference) over three timepoints (baseline, 9, and 21 weeks) between participants identifying as African American/Black (n = 90) vs White (n = 29) across both intervention and control conditions.

Results: At baseline, African American/Black participants had higher pain severity and had significantly different age, work status, and comorbidity profiles. RMANOVA models also identified significant race-based differences in the response to the parent IMGV intervention. There was reduced pain severity in African American/Black subjects in the IMGV condition from baseline to 9 weeks. This change was not observed in White participants over this time period. However, there was a reduction in pain severity in White participants over the subsequent interval from 9 to 21 week where IMGV had no significant effect in African American/Black subjects during this latter time period.

Conclusion: Interactions between pain and racialization require further investigation to understand how race-based heterogeneity in the response to integrative medicine treatments for chronic pain contribute to the broader landscape of health inequity.

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