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NIH Grant Allows 91桃色 Professor to Study Racial Discrepancies in Pain Care

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Emma Atkinson

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doctor with black male patient

鈥淗ow much pain are you in, on a scale from 1 to 10?鈥

It鈥檚 a question we鈥檙e all familiar with and a crucial tool for medical providers looking to assess the severity of an injury or illness. But not all pain is created equal鈥攁nd, as several studies indicate, not all doctors take their patients鈥 pain as seriously as they perhaps should. And, as untold legions of patients report, that鈥檚 especially true when it comes to people of color and mixed-race people.

wants to change how doctors think about pain care. Lloyd is an assistant professor in the University of

Professor Paige Lloyd

顿别苍惫别谤鈥檚 . She recently received a grant of nearly $700,000 from the National Institutes of Health to study racial disparities in pain care.

鈥淧ain is a place where there鈥檚 a lot of subjectivity,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd when you have subjectivity, that can be a ripe opportunity for biases like stereotypes, prejudice, and empathy gaps to play a role.鈥

Lloyd is the primary investigator in the five-year grant-funded study, which will consist of three phases.

First, the team will ask pain-care providers from across the U.S. to evaluate hypothetical scenarios with patients of different races.

鈥淲e鈥檙e looking at biases. Given the same information, are these providers allocating more pain care, say, to white as compared to Black or multiracial folks," Lloyd said. 鈥淚 think one sizable advantage of this grant is the focus on multiracial folks, or the integration of multiracial folks, into consideration. We know very little about how multiracial people are treated and the biases that they might be vulnerable to.鈥

The second part of the study involves a partnership with the at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Researchers will use CU Anschutz鈥檚 simulation center to immerse Rocky Mountain-region medical students in a faux emergency room scenario, during which they鈥檒l interact with hypothetical patients of different races who are experiencing pain.

鈥淲e鈥檒l videotape and record their interactions with the patients to look at how they differ across hypothetical patient race,鈥 Lloyd said. 鈥淚t's a really, I think, exciting design that has a little bit more realism integrated into it.鈥

Once the first two studies are complete, the third phase involves Lloyd and her team will examining their findings and drawing conclusions about the role that race plays in how providers evaluate pain.

鈥淪o this might be something like, for multiracial folks, for example, if you make clear their race ahead of time, providers might not be spending a lot of time trying to interpret what this person鈥檚 race is, which can lead to negativity, which can lead to distractedness,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd instead, they might be able to just move on to treating the patient.鈥

Lloyd said the goal of her research is to understand exactly where certain biases exist in order to recommend better intervention strategies to medical schools. These strategies can vary from creating less white-centric textbooks to exposing medical students to more racially diverse environments during their training.

鈥淲e're thinking about ways to expose them to patients, more variable patients, and working with them to try to individuate those patients,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o not just have them be a patient in and out of the door, but spend some time sort of getting to know that patient and thinking about that patient critically. And we're hoping that might be one step in the right direction.鈥

Lloyd and her team will disseminate the findings of the study through peer-reviewed journals and op-eds; by speaking at medical, psychology and pain science conferences; and during conversations with health researchers and clinicians.

鈥淭he hope is that these conversations and opportunities for dissemination will reach relevant audiences but also that those audiences will provide advice and feedback to strengthen the work,鈥 Lloyd said. 鈥淚ntervention strategies will likely be proposed and then tested in a subsequent grant鈥擨 hope to submit that near the tail end of this grant. The current grant is not well positioned to suggest interventions that can be immediately implemented in healthcare settings鈥攂ut [can] rather lay the groundwork for developing those.鈥

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