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Ed. Note: The following
is a press release from the University of Michigan Health System.
Adults under the age of 50 who have chronic pain may be less able to cope
with their condition and more prone to associated depression than their
elders, a new study suggests.
And the same “generation gap” pattern exists among both blacks and whites,
though blacks of all ages have previously been found to experience more
pain and more pain-related negative effects than whites.
The study also finds that in general, blacks scored higher than whites on
measurements of the intensity of their pain, disability related to their
pain, and depression symptoms. This finding is consistent with past
studies on pain that examined racial differences in chronic pain
experience.
The new study, by researchers at the University of Michigan and the
University of South Florida, appears in a special issue of the journal
Pain Medicine, published by the American Academy of Pain Medicine. The
issue focuses on the differences in pain, pain effects and pain treatment
that are increasingly being found between members of different racial and
ethnic groups.
“No matter what your color or age, chronic pain has a major impact on your
life and your ability to work or function,” says the study’s senior
author, U-M pain specialist Carmen R. Green, M.D., who is co-guest editor
of the special issue. “Our study suggests that age is a significant factor
across races and ethnicities, and that the impact of pain may differ even
within racial and ethnic groups.” Green recently was named an inaugural
Mayday Pain and Society fellow by the Mayday Pain Project.
The new study examined detailed data from 5,823 black and white adults
treated at the U-M Multidisciplinary Pain Center over eight years. They
were divided into two groups: those under age 50, and those over age 50.
During their evaluation for pain treatment, the patients completed
standardized questionnaires that assessed their mental and physical
status, as well as the intensity and impact of their pain, the ability to
cope with their pain, sleep and alcohol use patterns, and symptoms of
depression and post-traumatic stress disorder that can result from painful
medical conditions or an incident that results in chronic and persistent
pain. The study was retrospective and cross-sectional, and it included
patients with many chronic pain conditions.
Within both racial groups, there were significant differences between the
age groups.
Older whites, and older blacks, were better able to cope with their pain,
had less trouble falling asleep, and had fewer depressive symptoms than
younger members of their racial group. Even after the researchers
corrected for differences in the number of months the patients had lived
with their pain, and for differences in gender, marital status and
education, the effects remained.
Why the gap? A combination of generational characteristics and attitudes,
life experiences and age-related health expectations may be at play,
though more research is needed to find out, say Green and her colleague
Tamara Baker, Ph.D., of USF’s School of Aging Studies. Baker formerly was
a postdoctoral fellow at the U-M School of Public Health’s Center for
Research on Ethnicity, Culture and Health.
“Older people may feel that pain is just something that you deal with,
perhaps because they were raised in a time when pain was not addressed in
the way we deal with it today, or because they feel that pain is just a
normal part of getting older,” says Green, an associate professor of
anesthesiology at the U-M Medical School and attending physician at the
U-M Center for Interventional Pain Medicine.
“But younger people, who may be dealing with job and family stress in
addition to their pain, may experience more negative effects,” she
continues. “They may also have different expectations about pain treatment
and about experiencing chronic pain at a relatively young age. This is
particularly important because the prevalence of chronic pain is
increasing.”
Indeed, recent advances in pain diagnosis and treatments, and in the
training of doctors and nurses to see pain as a vital sign just like
temperature and pulse rate, mean that more patients are getting effective
relief for their chronic pain than ever before. So, younger people may
just expect more from pain treatment than their elders do.
Green and Baker note that assessing depression symptoms in people being
treated for chronic pain is complicated by a sort of “chicken and egg”
problem: depression itself can cause or exacerbate vague pain, but it can
also be triggered by a stressful event such as an injury or illness that
itself causes pain. It is important to note, they say, that when a person
has chronic pain, other problems such as depression, anxiety and sleep
disturbances often follow.
For blacks, age isn’t the only factor. They are more likely than whites to
have several chronic illnesses associated with pain, ranging from diabetes
to heart disease and arthritis. They are also more likely to experience
increased disability associated with those diseases.
Numerous studies have shown that blacks and members of other racial and
ethnic minorities are consistently under-treated for pain across a range
of conditions, from cancer and chest pain to acutely painful conditions
like broken bones and chronic lower-back pain.
And Green’s own previous work has also shown that, regardless of their
age, blacks with chronic non-cancer pain from any source suffered more
psychological and physical effects than whites. Other research by Green
and her colleagues has shown that access to pain care and pain medications
can also vary by race and ethnicity. For instance, pharmacies in
neighborhoods with large minority populations tend not to carry narcotic
pain medicines such as morphine.
Green hopes that the new study, and others in the special issue of Pain
Medicine, will continue to draw the attention of pain researchers and
plant the seeds for further research in this area.
“These findings are particularly important when you consider that pain is
estimated to impact more than 100 million Americans, and will clearly
impact independence and successful aging,” she says.
Reference: Pain Medicine, Vol. 6, No. 1, Jan. 2005
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