1 / 55

Disparities in Pain Medicine: A Psychological Perspective

Disparities in Pain Medicine: A Psychological Perspective. Raymond C. Tait, PhD Saint Louis University. Disclosures. Spouse is on the Speaker’s Bureau for Lilly Center for World Health & Medicine (direct report) has a project jointly funded by Lilly and J&J No discussion of unapproved uses.

Download Presentation

Disparities in Pain Medicine: A Psychological Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Disparities in Pain Medicine:A Psychological Perspective Raymond C. Tait, PhD Saint Louis University

  2. Disclosures • Spouse is on the Speaker’s Bureau for Lilly • Center for World Health & Medicine (direct report) has a project jointly funded by Lilly and J&J • No discussion of unapproved uses

  3. The study of error is not only in the highest degree prophylactic, but it serves as a stimulating introduction to the study of truth. --Walter Lippmann (1922)

  4. Organization of Comments • Review general evidence on disparities in pain care • Primary focus = race/ethnicity • Race/ethnicity and SES • The clinical encounter • Pain as subjective phenomenon • Variability in provider assessments • Provider as a social judge • Patient influences (reported pain severity, race/ethnicity) • Is high pain severity a condition for context-mediated judgments? • Situational (medical evidence) • Provider (specialty) • Imputed response cost – a common pathway?

  5. Disparities in Pain Care • Race/ethnicity • Todd et al., 1993; Green et al., 2003; IOM, 2003; Chibnall et al., 2005; Anderson et al., 2009; IOM, 2003, 2011; Meghani et al., 2012 • Gender • Martin & Lemos, 2002; Taylor et al., 2005 • Age • Old (Hadjistravropoulos et al., 2007; Weiner et al, 2002) • Young (Howard, 2003; Anthony & Schanberg, 2005) • Socioeconomic status • Morrison et al., 2000; Mayberry et al., 2000 • Conditions • Low back pain (Tait et al., 2004) • Acute pain (Salmon & Manyande, 1996) • Recurrent pain (Elander et al., 2006) • Cancer pain (Cleeland et al., 1997)

  6. Disparities in Pain Care • Race/ethnicity • Todd et al., 1993; Green et al., 2003; IOM, 2003; Chibnall et al., 2005; Anderson et al., 2009; IOM, 2011; Meghani et al., 2012 • Gender • Martin & Lemos, 2002; Taylor et al., 2005 • Age • Old (Hadjistravropoulos et al., 2007; Weiner et al, 2002) • Young (Howard, 2003; Anthony & Schanberg, 2005) • Socioeconomic status • Morrison et al., 2000; Mayberry et al., 2000 • Conditions • Low back pain (Tait et al., 2004) • Acute pain (Salmon & Manyande, 1996) • Recurrent pain (Elander et al., 2006) • Cancer pain (Cleeland et al., 1997)

  7. Patient Factors in Racial Disparities: Experimental Studies of Pain Perception • African Americans demonstrate lower pain thresholds and tolerances than nHw’s • Zborowski, 1969; Zatzick & Dimsdale, 1990 • Negative affect may mediate findings • Sheffield et al., 2000; Campbell et al., 2008 • Higher vigilance may mediate findings • Campbell et al., 2005 • Cautionary notes • Experimental data may not predict response to clinical pain (Edwards et al., 2001) • Experimenter-subject effects (e.g., ↑ pain behavior in ethnically concordant pairs; Hsieh et al., 2011)

  8. Patient Factors in Racial Disparities: Clinical Studies of Pain Perception • Acute pain • ↑ AA relative to nHw (Faucett et al., 1994) • No diffs (Barak & Weisenberg, 1988) • Chronic pain • ↑ AA relative to nHw (McCracken et al., 2001; Selim et al., 2001; White et al., 1999) • No diffs (Thomason et al., 1998; Jordan et al., 1998; Tait & Chibnall, 2001) • Methodologic challenges • Control over prior treatment, sampling (most patients come from single clinic), social reactivity

  9. Patient Factors in Racial Disparities: Pain-Related Coping and Adjustment • ↑ post-treatment disability for AA vsnHw • Chronic LBP (Selim et al., 2001; Chibnall et al., 2005), osteoarthritis (Allen et al., 2010), general chronic pain (Edwards et al., 2001) • ↑ distress for AA vsnHw • Allen et al., 2010; McCracken et al., 2001 • Coping • ↑ passive coping (Jordan et al., 1998; Clark et al., 1999) • ↑ catastrophizing (Fabian et al., 2011) • Distrust of medical professionals • Lillie-Blanton et al., 2000 • Expectations of benefit • LaVeist et al., 2000; Ibrahim et al., 2002

  10. Racial Disparities: Situational/Public Health Factors • Racism • Long-term implications for health (Clark et al., 1999) • Socioeconomic factors co-vary with minority status (Mayberry et al., 2000; Meghani et al., 2012) • Access • Analgesics (Morrison et al., 2000; Green et al., ) • Medical care (Meghani et al., 2012) • Insurance (Zuvekas and Taliaferro, 2003) • Resources (Tait & Chibnall, 2012)

  11. Relative Contributions ofRace and Socioeconomic Status

  12. Disparities in Occupational Lumbar Injury Outcomes Research (DOLOR)(Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, R01 HS13087-01) • Missouri cases of LB injuries that were settled between 1/01 and 6/02 • St. Louis city, St. Louis county, Jackson county • 90% of African Americans in the state • 2,934 cases • 50.3% completed survey • 14.7% refused survey • 35.0% could not be traced • Data sources • WC database • Telephone survey instruments

  13. Demographics(N = 1,475) • Age  43.6 years • Education = 13.07 years • Gender = 896 males, 533 females • Race (self-identified) = 889 Caucasian, 540 African Americans, 43 mixed, 3 refused • Working full-time at time of injury = 95.2% • Working full-time now = 62.8%

  14. WC Database: Surgical vs. Non-Surgical Treatment(Chibnall et al., Spine, 2006) 2(1) = 106.1, P < 0.0001 OR = 4.0; 95% CI = 2.9 – 5.4

  15. WC Management Database by Race

  16. Predictors of WC Management:Demographics, SES, and Injury*(Tait et al., Pain, 2004) * Simultaneous entry multiple hierarchical regression: R2 change (all P’s < 0.001)

  17. Clinical Outcomes: 2 Years Post-Settlement (Chibnall et al., Pain, 2005) * P < 0.0001

  18. 6-Year Follow-Up: High Levels of Pain, Catastrophizing, and Disability(Chibnall & Tait, Pain Medicine, 2011) * 1 = high (pain ≥ 7; PCS ≥ 30; PDI ≥ 45) vs. 0 = less than high

  19. 0.29 0.29 0.29 0.32 0.32 0.32 0.37 0.37 0.37 0.66 0.66 0.66 Race Race 0.23 0.23 - - 0.29 0.29 - - 0.27 0.27 0.60 0.60 Gender Gender SES SES WC Factor WC Factor PDD PDD - - 1 1 PDD PDD - - 2 2 - - 0.25 0.25 - - 0.14 0.14 Age Age 0.16 0.16 Time Time 0 +1.75 0 +1.75 years +6 years +6 years years Settlement Baseline Long Settlement Baseline Long - - Term Term Path Analysis for Predicting Adjustment (pain/distress/disability: PDD) Circled values indicate Multiple R at that stage of the model, P < 0.001

  20. 10 * 9.5 Caucasian 9 African American 8.5 8 7.5 7 6.5 6 5.5 Pct. Change from Baseline 5 * 4.5 * 4 * 3.5 * 3 2.5 * * 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 Baseline Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Post-Settlement Years Race Effects on Financial Court Actions: 5 Years Post-Settlement(Tait & Chibnall, Spine, 2012)

  21. Implications for Race & SES • Race/ethnicity and SES are associated with differences in patient/provider approach to treatment and intermediate-term outcomes • Race/ethnicity appears to account for greater effect during active clinical management • Race/ethnicity and SES are associated with differences in long-term outcomes • SES accounts for greater long-term effects • What accounts for disparate clinical management?

  22. Judging Pain in Others: A Social Interaction

  23. Judging Pain in Others: A Projective Test? One Patient Two Providers Opinion #1 Opinion #2

  24. Internist Judgments of Chronic Low Back Pain(Chibnall, Dabney & Tait, Pain Medicine, 2000) • 48 internists from an academic school of medicine • 2 x 4 mixed between and within-subjects design • Vignettes describing hypothetical low back pain patients varied by pain severity (low vs. high) • Internists provided 4 waves of clinical information (history  physical exam findings  functional disability  diagnostic test results) • Measures = MD judgments regarding patient medical/psychological/disability status, treatment, diagnostic testing, and referral options

  25. MD Judgments: Reliability Across 4 Waves of Information

  26. Patient Characteristics (“The Target”)

  27. Pain Presentation Factors that Influence Judgments • Chronicity • Klein et al., 1982; Teske et al., 1983; Taylor et al., 1984; Leclere et al., 1990; Eccleston et al., 1997; Hahn, 2001 • Distribution • Ransford et al., 1976; Von Baeyer et al., 1983; Margolis et al., 1986; Tait et al., 1990 • Behavior • Prkachin et al., 1994; Krause et al., 1994;Solomon et al., 1997; Prkachin et al., 2001 • Severity • Grossman et al., 1991; Zalon, 1993; Chibnall and Tait, 1995; Lieberman et al., 1996; Solomon et al., 1997; Tait and Chibnall, 1997; Marquie et al., 2003

  28. Subject vs “Patient” Pain RatingsChibnall, Tait & Ross, J Behav Med, 1997

  29. RATES OF AGREEMENT IN PATIENT & CAREGIVER PAIN RATINGS(from Grossman et al., Correlation of patient and caregiver ratings of cancer pain, J. Pain Symp Manag, 1991; 6:53-57)

  30. Observer Perceptions of Low Back Pain: Effects of Pain Report and Other Contextual Factors(Chibnall & Tait, 1995) • 2 [hi/lo pain] x (2 [+ medical evidence] x 2 [+ relationship valence] x 2 [+ victim status]) • Dependent Variables • estimated pain, disability, emotional distress • + personality characteristics • 80 undergraduates • Context influences evident in main effects, 2-way, 3-way, and 4-way interactions

  31. Study Design: 2 x (2 x 2 x 2) Mixed Between and Within(Chibnall & Tait, 1995) Note: 8 vignettes; counterbalanced for order and sequence Pain: High (7/10) vs. Low (3/10) Medical Evidence: Present vs Absent Control: Present vs Absent Relationship: Positive vs Negative

  32. Example Vignettes and Levels of Independent Variables

  33. Reported Pain Severity & Medical Evidence: Effects on Pain Estimates(Chibnall & Tait, 1995) * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.001

  34. High Pain Severity: Implications for Clinical Judgment Pain Report Low (1-3) Moderate (4-6) High (7-10) Little likelihood of context effects Some likelihood of context effects without objective evidence High likelihood of context effects with/without objective evidence

  35. Sociodemographic Factors that Influence Judgments • Gender • Martin & Lemos, 2002; Taylor et al., 2005 • Age • Old (Hadjistravropoulos et al., 2007; Weiner et al, 2002) • Young (Howard, 2003; Anthony & Schanberg, 2005) • Socioeconomic status • Morrison et al., 2000; Mayberry et al., 2000 • Race/ethnicity • Todd et al., 1993; Green et al., 2003; IOM, 2003; Chibnall et al., 2005; Anderson et al., 2009; IOM, 2011; Meghani et al., 2012

  36. Claimants with HNP: Predictors of Surgery* • *No surgery vs surgery: 2(8) = 59.6, P < .001; R2 = 0.13 (N =640)

  37. Contextual Characteristics(“The Situation”)

  38. Factors that Influence Judgments: Situational Features • Compensation status • Hadler, 1994; Kennedy, 1997; Chibnall and Tait, 1999; Merskey and Teasell, 2000; Kappesser et al., 2006 • Medical evidence • Carey et al., 1988; Birdwell et al., 1993; Tait and Chibnall, 1994; Chibnall and Tait, 1995; Chibnall et al., 1997; Tait et al., 2006

  39. Study Design: 2 x 2 x 2 Within-Subjects(Tait & Chibnall, 1994) Note: 8 vignettes; counterbalanced for order and sequence Medical Evidence: Present vs Absent Control: Present vs Absent Relationship: Positive vs Negative

  40. Main Effects: Medical Evidence * P < 0.05; *** P < 0.001

  41. Incremental Certainty of Disability: Low Back Pain(Carey et al., J ClinEpidemiol 1988;41:691-697)

  42. Provider Characteristics (“The Judge”)

  43. Factors that Influence Judgments:Observer Features • Affect • Tait & Chibnall, 1994; Sharpe et al., 1994; Chibnall & Tait, 1995 • Empathy • Goubert et al., 2005; Tait et al., 2005; Tait, 2008 • Experience/Specialty • Lenburg et al., 1970; Choiniere et al., 1990; Chibnall & Tait, 2000; Prkachin et al., 2001; Marquie et al., 2003; Tait et al., 2010

  44. Judging Pain: Physician Specialty(Tait et al., 2010) * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.001

  45. Pain Management: A Social Transaction • Pain management is an interactive phenomenon • Social transaction (Craig et al., 2010) • Participative decision-making (Frantsve & Kerns, 2006) • Social contract (Kappesser et al., 2008) • Contract influenced by assumed relational roles (patient and provider) • Implied contractual demands of patients with severe, chronic pain • Fix me • At least help me—analgesic medications (opioids?) • Handle any regulatory implications • Assume long-term management (not cure) • Embrace high (ongoing?) time demands • Recognize the likelihood of associated psychological distress • Tackle disability-related sequelae • Manage sick role, litigation and other system issues • Treat likely co-morbidities • Prepare for high costs of care

  46. Imputed Response Cost: A Common Pathway? • Definition: Response cost or negative punishment is [a] way to make behavior less frequent • Increasing the cost of a response decreases the likelihood that it will occur • Imputed response cost: The expectation that a given action will result in costly and/or burdensome consequences • Treating patients with chronic pain occasions high imputed costs secondary to social contract responsibilities • Especially with high pain severity • How to reduce response cost • Decline (or share) treatment responsibility • Discount severity (reduce responsibility)

  47. Imputed Response Cost: Effects on Pain Judgment • Severe chronic pain presentation • 43 yo WM w/ severe pain x 12 mos (prior L4-5 discectomy) • Grade III spondylolisthesis at L5-S1, DJD at L4-5, +SLR on left, equivocal EMG—not deemed a surgery candidate • Comorbidities: HTN, ↑ Psych distress, frequent work absences • Oxycodone 30mg bid, ibuprofen 800mg tid, vicodinprn • Personal cost (hi/lo) • Ongoing treatment responsibility vs evaluation only • Societal cost (hi/lo) • Evaluation for disability determination vs FYI only • Dependent variables • Psychological attribution, pain-related dysfunction

  48. Pain & Dysfunction: Expected Effects of Imputed Personal/Societal Costs Mean T Score—Pain & Dysfunction Personal Cost

  49. Pain & Dysfunction: Actual Effects of Imputed Personal/Societal Costs Mean T Score—Pain & Dysfunction Personal Cost

More Related