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The impact of patients' gender, race, and age on health care professionals' pain management decisions: An online survey using virtual human technology

机译:患者的性别,种族和年龄对医疗保健专业人员的疼痛管理决策的影响:使用虚拟人类技术的在线调查

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Background: Previous literature indicates that biases exist in pain ratings. Healthcare professionals have been found to use patient demographic cues such as sex, race, and age when making decisions about pain treatment. However, there has been little research comparing healthcare professionals' (i.e., physicians and nurses) pain decision policies based on patient demographic cues. Methods: The current study used virtual human technology to examine the impact of patients' sex, race, and age on healthcare professionals' pain ratings. One hundred and ninety-three healthcare professionals (nurses and physicians) participated in this online study. Results: Healthcare professionals assessed virtual human patients who were male and African American to be experiencing greater pain intensity and were more willing to administer opioid analgesics to them than to their demographic counterparts. Similarly, nurses were more willing to administer opioids make treatment decisions than physicians. There was also a significant virtual human-sex by healthcare professional interaction for pain assessment and treatment decisions. The sex difference (male. >. female) was greater for nurses than physicians. Conclusions: Results replicated findings of previous studies using virtual human patients to assess the effect of sex, race, and age in pain decision-making. In addition, healthcare professionals' pain ratings differed depending on healthcare profession. Nurses were more likely to rate pain higher and be more willing to administer opioid analgesics than were physicians. Healthcare professionals rated male and African American virtual human patients as having higher pain in most pain assessment and treatment domains compared to their demographic counterparts. Similarly the virtual human-sex difference ratings were more pronounced for nurses than physicians. Given the large number of patients seen throughout the healthcare professionals' careers, these pain practice biases have important public health implications. This study suggests attention to the influence of patient demographic cues in pain management education is needed.
机译:背景:以前的文献表明,疼痛评估存在偏差。发现医疗保健专业人员在做出疼痛治疗决策时会使用患者的人口统计线索,例如性别,种族和年龄。但是,很少有研究根据患者的人口统计线索比较医疗保健专业人员(即医生和护士)的疼痛决策策略。方法:当前的研究使用虚拟人类技术来检查患者的性别,种族和年龄对医疗保健专业人员的疼痛等级的影响。 193位医疗保健专业人员(护士和医师)参加了此在线研究。结果:医护人员评估了虚拟人类患者,其中男性和非裔美国人正经历更大的疼痛强度,并且比他们的人口统计学同伴更愿意对他们使用阿片类镇痛药。同样,护士比医生更愿意使用阿片类药物做出治疗决定。医护人员之间还存在大量的虚拟人性行为,用于疼痛评估和治疗决策。护士的性别差异(男>女)大于医生。结论:结果重复了先前使用虚拟人类患者评估性别,种族和年龄在疼痛决策中的作用的研究结果。另外,医疗保健专业人员的疼痛等级根据医疗保健行业而有所不同。与医生相比,护士更有可能使疼痛评分更高,并且更愿意使用阿片类镇痛药。医护人员将男性和非裔美国虚拟人类患者在大多数疼痛评估和治疗领域中的疼痛程度比其人口统计学上的同行患者高。同样,护士对虚拟人性别差异的评分比对医生更为明显。鉴于在医疗保健专业人员的整个职业生涯中都见过大量患者,因此这些疼痛偏见对公共卫生有重要影响。这项研究建议需要在疼痛管理教育中注意患者人口统计线索的影响。

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