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Trends in Racial Inequalities in the Administration of Opioid and Non-opioid Pain Medication in US Emergency Departments Across 1999-2020

Authors
 Trevor Thompson  ;  Sofia Stathi  ;  Francesca Buckley  ;  Jae Il Shin  ;  Chih-Sung Liang 
Citation
 JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, Vol.39(2) : 214-221, 2024-02 
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
ISSN
 0884-8734 
Issue Date
2024-02
MeSH
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic* / therapeutic use ; Analgesics, Opioid* / therapeutic use ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Emergency Service, Hospital ; Health Care Surveys ; Humans ; Pain / drug therapy ; Practice Patterns, Physicians' ; United States / epidemiology
Keywords
NHAMCS ; emergency department ; opioids ; pain ; racial inequalities
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite initiatives to eradicate racial inequalities in pain treatment, there is no clear picture on whether this has translated to changes in clinical practice. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether racial disparities in the receipt of pain medication in the emergency department have diminished over a 22-year period from 1999 to 2020. DESIGN: We used data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, an annual, cross-sectional probability sample of visits to emergency departments of non-federal general and short-stay hospitals in the USA. PATIENTS: Pain-related visits to the ED by Black or White patients. MAIN MEASURES: Prescriptions for opioid and non-opioid analgesics. KEY RESULTS: A total of 203,854 of all sampled 625,433 ED visits (35%) by Black or White patients were pain-related, translating to a population-weighted estimate of over 42 million actual visits to US emergency departments for pain annually across 1999-2020. Relative risk regression found visits by White patients were 1.26 (95% CI, 1.22-1.30; p<0.001) times more likely to result in an opioid prescription for pain compared to Black patients (40% vs. 32%). Visits by Black patients were also 1.25 (95% CI, 1.21-1.30; p<0.001) times more likely to result in non-opioid analgesics only being prescribed. Results were not substantively altered after adjusting for insurance status, type and severity of pain, geographical region, and other potential confounders. Spline regression found no evidence of meaningful change in the magnitude of racial disparities in prescribed pain medication over 22 years. CONCLUSIONS: Initiatives to create equitable healthcare do not appear to have resulted in meaningful alleviation of racial disparities in pain treatment in the emergency department. © 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.
Full Text
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11606-023-08401-2
DOI
10.1007/s11606-023-08401-2
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Pediatrics (소아과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Shin, Jae Il(신재일) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2326-1820
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/201083
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