A
new study that measures pain sensitivities among
whites and African-Americans suggests assessment
procedures may be to blame for reported racial differences
in the amount of pain experienced.
Previous research and anecdotal clinical
evidence have suggested that African-Americans tend
to be more sensitive
to pain than
whites, but the latest research study shows the two
groups simply interpret standard pain-rating scales
differently. The new study also confirms
earlier findings that women are more sensitive to
pain than men.
University of Calgary psychologist
Tavis Campbell led the research project while at
Duke University
Medical Center in Durham,
North Carolina. The results are being published
in the April issue of the medical journal, The Journal
of Pain.
“
Many pain medications are addictive and have unpleasant
side effects, so it’s important for physicians to be able to understand
exactly how much pain their patients are experiencing,” Campbell
says. “This research supports well-established findings of slightly
higher sensitivity to pain among women compared to
men, but revealed no differences between whites and
African-Americans.”
Campbell and his research colleagues
tested 135 men and women aged 25-45, a group that
included
72 African-Americans and 59 women. Researchers
inflated a blood-pressure cuff on each subject’s
arm and left it inflated for several minutes,
creating an aching sensation not unlike many clinical pains.
The participants were then asked to
rate their pain according to standard pain rating
scales,
which measure both the unpleasantness and
intensity of the sensation.
Pain rating scales use terms ranging
from ‘neutral’ to ‘very
intolerable’ for the unpleasantness of the sensation, and words
ranging from ‘nothing’ to ‘extremely intense’ for
its intensity.
“
If we used the standard pain scales, women reported
more pain than men, and African-Americans reported more pain than whites,” Campbell
says.
“
But if we first gave them some cards with the descriptors
on them and said, ‘You arrange these in any way that you want,
from the least painful to the most painful,’ then women became
more similar in their pain reports to men, but there
was no difference between African-Americans and whites.”