4.6 Article

Sociodemographic disparities in chronic pain, based on 12-year longitudinal data

期刊

PAIN
卷 158, 期 2, 页码 313-322

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000762

关键词

Chronic pain; Health disparities; HRS; Mortality; Mortality selection; Persistent pain; Reporting heterogeneity; Socioeconomic disparities; Socioeconomic status

资金

  1. NIA [NIA U01AG009740]
  2. Center for Demography and Ecology
  3. Center for Demography of Health [NIA P30 AG017266]
  4. Center for Demography and Ecology [NICHD R24 HD047873]
  5. University of Wisconsin-Madison

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Existing estimates of sociodemographic disparities in chronic pain in the United States are based on cross-sectional data, often treat pain as a binary construct, and rarely test for nonresponse or other types of bias. This study uses 7 biennial waves of national data from the Health and Retirement Study (1998-2010; n = 5 19,776) to describe long-term pain disparities among older (age 511) American adults. It also investigates whether pain severity, reporting heterogeneity, survey nonresponse, and/or mortality selection might bias estimates of social disparities in pain. In the process, the article clarifies whether 2 unexpected patterns observed crosssectionally-plateauing of pain above age 60, and lower pain among racial/ethnic minorities-are genuine or artefactual. Findings show high prevalence of chronic pain: 27.3% at baseline, increasing to 36.6% thereafter. Multivariate latent growth curve models reveal extremely large disparities in pain by sex, education, and wealth, which manifest primarily as differences in intercept. Net of these variables, there is no racial/ethnic minority disadvantage in pain scores, and indeed a black advantage vis-a-vis whites. Pain levels are predictive of subsequent death, even a decade in the future. No evidence of pain-related survey attrition is found, but surveys not accounting for pain severity and reporting heterogeneity are likely to underestimate socioeconomic disparities in pain. The lack of minority disadvantage (net of socioeconomic status) appears genuine. However, the age-related plateauing of pain observed cross-sectionally is not replicated longitudinally, and seems partially attributable to mortality selection, as well as to rising pain levels by birth cohort.

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