Overview

Pain is invisible, and diagnosis depends on patients' reports. These factors contribute to the treatment of pain to be devalued and stigmatized. When issues of culture, race, and ethnicity come into play with pain experiences, it becomes even more complex. Assessing the interaction between how patients construct the meaning and subjective experiences of pain is necessary, rather than simply dealing with only the biomedical causes. Consequently, pain may be universal, but culture influences the creation of meanings, patient experiences, verbal expressions, and coping with pain.

Education Category: Ethics - Human Rights
Release Date: 10/01/2021
Expiration Date: 09/30/2024

Table of Contents

Audience

This course is designed for mental and behavioral health professionals who may intervene to improve the treatment of pain in diverse patient populations.

Accreditations & Approvals

NetCE has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 6361. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. NetCE is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs. As a Jointly Accredited Organization, NetCE is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved under this program. Regulatory boards are the final authority on courses accepted for continuing education credit. This course, The Intersection of Pain and Culture, Approval #07012022-23, provided by NetCE is approved for continuing education by the New Jersey Social Work Continuing Education Approval Collaborative, which is administered by NASW-NJ. CE Approval Collaborative Approval Period: Tuesday, July 12, 2022 through August 31, 2024. New Jersey social workers will receive 5 Clinical or Social & Cultural Competence CE credits for participating in this course. NetCE is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #SW-0033. This course is considered self-study, as defined by the New York State Board for Social Work. NetCE is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed mental health counselors #MHC-0021. This course is considered self-study by the New York State Board of Mental Health Counseling. NetCE is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed marriage and family therapists. #MFT-0015.This course is considered self-study by the New York State Board of Marriage and Family Therapy. Materials that are included in this course may include interventions and modalities that are beyond the authorized practice of licensed master social work and licensed clinical social work in New York. As a licensed professional, you are responsible for reviewing the scope of practice, including activities that are defined in law as beyond the boundaries of practice for an LMSW and LCSW. A licensee who practices beyond the authorized scope of practice could be charged with unprofessional conduct under the Education Law and Regents Rules.

Designations of Credit

NetCE designates this continuing education activity for 2.5 NBCC clock hour(s). Social workers participating in this intermediate to advanced course will receive 5 Clinical continuing education clock hours.

Individual State Behavioral Health Approvals

In addition to states that accept ASWB, NetCE is approved as a provider of continuing education by the following state boards: Alabama State Board of Social Work Examiners, Provider #0515; Florida Board of Clinical Social Work, Marriage and Family Therapy and Mental Health Counseling, CE Broker Provider #50-2405; Illinois Division of Professional Regulation for Social Workers, License #159.001094; Illinois Division of Professional Regulation for Licensed Professional and Clinical Counselors, License #197.000185; Illinois Division of Professional Regulation for Marriage and Family Therapists, License #168.000190;

Course Objective

The purpose of this course is to increase clinicians' knowledge and awareness of the impact of culture on issues of pain and pain management in order to improve the provision of care and patients' quality of life.

Learning Objectives

Upon completion of this course, you should be able to:

  1. Define pain.
  2. Discuss the changing demographic trends that contribute to the United States' multicultural landscape.
  3. Define culture, race, and ethnicity.
  4. Analyze how culture, race and ethnicity influence how pain is defined, expressed, and experienced.
  5. Discuss how different racial and ethnic minority groups utilize different terms for pain.
  6. Identify how different racial and ethnic minority groups respond to and cope with pain.
  7. Explain how different racial and ethnic minority groups seek help with pain.
  8. Discuss the factors that contribute to racial and ethnic disparities in pain management.
  9. Identify pain rating scales and instruments and how culture influences these rating scales.
  10. Discuss best practice guidelines for assessments and interventions that are culturally relevant and competent.

Faculty

Alice Yick Flanagan, PhD, MSW, received her Master’s in Social Work from Columbia University, School of Social Work. She has clinical experience in mental health in correctional settings, psychiatric hospitals, and community health centers. In 1997, she received her PhD from UCLA, School of Public Policy and Social Research. Dr. Yick Flanagan completed a year-long post-doctoral fellowship at Hunter College, School of Social Work in 1999. In that year she taught the course Research Methods and Violence Against Women to Masters degree students, as well as conducting qualitative research studies on death and dying in Chinese American families.

Previously acting as a faculty member at Capella University and Northcentral University, Dr. Yick Flanagan is currently a contributing faculty member at Walden University, School of Social Work, and a dissertation chair at Grand Canyon University, College of Doctoral Studies, working with Industrial Organizational Psychology doctoral students. She also serves as a consultant/subject matter expert for the New York City Board of Education and publishing companies for online curriculum development, developing practice MCAT questions in the area of psychology and sociology. Her research focus is on the area of culture and mental health in ethnic minority communities.

Faculty Disclosure

Contributing faculty, Alice Yick Flanagan, PhD, MSW, has disclosed no relevant financial relationship with any product manufacturer or service provider mentioned.

Division Planner

James Trent, PhD

Division Planner Disclosure

The division planner has disclosed no relevant financial relationship with any product manufacturer or service provider mentioned.

Director of Development and Academic Affairs

Sarah Campbell

Director Disclosure Statement

The Director of Development and Academic Affairs has disclosed no relevant financial relationship with any product manufacturer or service provider mentioned.

About the Sponsor

The purpose of NetCE is to provide challenging curricula to assist healthcare professionals to raise their levels of expertise while fulfilling their continuing education requirements, thereby improving the quality of healthcare.

Our contributing faculty members have taken care to ensure that the information and recommendations are accurate and compatible with the standards generally accepted at the time of publication. The publisher disclaims any liability, loss or damage incurred as a consequence, directly or indirectly, of the use and application of any of the contents. Participants are cautioned about the potential risk of using limited knowledge when integrating new techniques into practice.

Disclosure Statement

It is the policy of NetCE not to accept commercial support. Furthermore, commercial interests are prohibited from distributing or providing access to this activity to learners.

Technical Requirements

Supported browsers for Windows include Microsoft Internet Explorer 9.0 and up, Mozilla Firefox 3.0 and up, Opera 9.0 and up, and Google Chrome. Supported browsers for Macintosh include Safari, Mozilla Firefox 3.0 and up, Opera 9.0 and up, and Google Chrome. Other operating systems and browsers that include complete implementations of ECMAScript edition 3 and CSS 2.0 may work, but are not supported. Supported browsers must utilize the TLS encryption protocol v1.1 or v1.2 in order to connect to pages that require a secured HTTPS connection. TLS v1.0 is not supported.

Implicit Bias in Health Care

The role of implicit biases on healthcare outcomes has become a concern, as there is some evidence that implicit biases contribute to health disparities, professionals' attitudes toward and interactions with patients, quality of care, diagnoses, and treatment decisions. This may produce differences in help-seeking, diagnoses, and ultimately treatments and interventions. Implicit biases may also unwittingly produce professional behaviors, attitudes, and interactions that reduce patients' trust and comfort with their provider, leading to earlier termination of visits and/or reduced adherence and follow-up. Disadvantaged groups are marginalized in the healthcare system and vulnerable on multiple levels; health professionals' implicit biases can further exacerbate these existing disadvantages.

Interventions or strategies designed to reduce implicit bias may be categorized as change-based or control-based. Change-based interventions focus on reducing or changing cognitive associations underlying implicit biases. These interventions might include challenging stereotypes. Conversely, control-based interventions involve reducing the effects of the implicit bias on the individual's behaviors. These strategies include increasing awareness of biased thoughts and responses. The two types of interventions are not mutually exclusive and may be used synergistically.

#77032: The Intersection of Pain and Culture

INTRODUCTION

Patients' experiences of pain may be frustrating if they defy biomedical explanation, and the treatment of pain tends to be stigmatized [1]. When culture, race, and ethnicity are taken into consideration, the treatment of pain becomes even more complex. Practitioners should address how patients construct the meaning and experiences of pain rather than simply dealing with a set of medical procedures and routines [1].

Pain is universal, but culture influences how patients ascribe meaning to, experience, express, cope with, and seek treatment for pain [2]. Research has found that culture, family beliefs, and religion all affect how patients manage, express, and experience pain [3]. In some cultures, stoicism is highly valued, making patients less likely to verbally or behaviorally express pain. Culture also plays a role in how much pain individuals perceive as tolerable and how they report pain [16]. Consequently, culturally competent and sensitive practice is essential for practitioners caring for patients who experience pain. It is inevitable that practitioners will work with patients and families who are from different racial and ethnic backgrounds. However, many practitioners are more comfortable taking a traditional biomedical perspective to pain and imposing a mechanistic diagnostic process. The result can cause tension between the patient and the practitioner [4].

This course will provide an overview of how different cultural groups respond to, experience, construct meaning to, and cope with pain. The focus will be on the general concept of pain, although there are many different types of pain and the dynamics for each type may be different. In addition, this course will focus on adults' (rather than children's) experiences with pain. Finally, pain disparities and factors that promote these disparities will be explored. This knowledge should assist practitioners to develop and implement culturally competent practice guidelines when working with racially and ethnically diverse patients who experience pain.

AN OVERVIEW OF PAIN

In ancient times, pain was considered an emotion; Aristotle referred to it as a passion of the soul [5]. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as "an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage" [6]. In 2020, the IASP expanded this definition with the addition of six key notes for further valuable context [6]:

  • Pain is always a personal experience that is influenced to varying degrees by biologic, psychological, and social factors.

  • Pain and nociception are different phenomena. Pain cannot be inferred solely from activity in sensory neurons.

  • Through their life experiences, individuals learn the concept of pain.

  • A person's report of an experience as pain should be respected.

  • Although pain usually serves an adaptive role, it may have adverse effects on function and social and psychological well-being.

  • Verbal description is only one of several behaviors to express pain; inability to communicate does not negate the possibility that a human or a nonhuman animal experiences pain.

Pain can be further categorized as acute (sudden and usually short-lived) or chronic (lasting three months or longer). Acute pain is the most common reason for emergency department visits [7].

It is important to remember that pain is not necessarily pathologic. Pain is the body's way of alerting that something is wrong and help is needed. When viewed in this way, pain facilitates healing [28].

Unfortunately, chronic pain is a common problem. Globally, it is estimated that 20% of adults experience pain, and every year, 1 in 10 adults are diagnosed with chronic pain [8]. On a worldwide basis, there are 1.9 billion individuals who experience recurrent, tension-based headaches—the most common type of chronic pain [18]. An estimated 20.4% of American adults report experiencing chronic pain in the past three months [19]. In the United States, the most common types of chronic pain are back pain (affecting 10.1% of adults), lower extremity pain (4.1%), upper extremity pain (4.1%), and headache (3.5%) [9]. Women in the United States are more likely than men to experience headaches, abdominal pain, and chronic widespread pain. Women are also more likely to report higher pain intensity than men, and young girls are more likely to experience pain in multiple areas compared with boys [27]. Reports of chronic pain differ among racial and ethnic minority groups. Roughly 23.5% of non-Hispanic White adults have chronic pain, compared with 6.8% Asian adults and 19.3% African Americans [19]. In one survey, Mexican Americans and African Americans had lower rates of back pain, leg and feet pain, and arm and hand pain compared to their white counterparts [9].

Pain can affect many aspects of a patient's life. More than 25% of adults with chronic pain indicate that their pain has had an adverse impact on their employment [10]. It is estimated that chronic pain results in costs of $635 billion annually, including more than $60 billion in lost productivity alone [11,32]. Direct healthcare costs are estimated to be up to $300 billion [30]. This is more than the costs of cancer, heart disease, and diabetes combined. Pain also affects the emotional and psychologic domains of an individual's life. Those who experience chronic pain are at increased risk for a variety of psychiatric problems, including substance abuse, depression, and anxiety. For example, patients with migraines are two to four times more likely to have depression than those without migraines [12]. Migraine also more than doubles the risk of anxiety disorder and agoraphobia or panic disorder and increases the likelihood of alcohol use disorder [13].

THE UNITED STATES: A MULTICULTURAL LANDSCAPE

According to U.S. Census data, the minority population is growing each year. By 2060, the minority population is expected to increase to 241 million, with the Hispanic population growing by 142%, the Asian population by 116%, and the African American population by 50% [14]. Hawaii, New Mexico, California, the District of Columbia, and Texas are regions in the United States that consist of a "majority-minority," meaning that more than half of the areas' populations consist of individuals who are racial/ethnic minorities [15]. With the increase of immigration and the slower birth rate in white families, it is anticipated that the United States is rapidly moving toward becoming a majority minority [15]. As of 2017, 58.6 million people in the United States identified as Hispanic (the largest minority group), and Hispanic Americans accounted for more than half of the total growth in the country between 2016 and 2017 [132].

AFRICAN AMERICANS

"African American" is a classification that serves as a descriptor; it has sociopolitical and self-identification ramifications. The U.S. Census Bureau defines African Americans or blacks as persons "having origins in any of the Black racial groups of Africa" [17].

According to the U.S. Census, African Americans number 48.2 million as of 2019 [31]. The state with the largest African American population, numbering at 3.9 million, is Texas (Tamir, 2021). By 2060, it is projected they will comprise 17.9% of the U.S. population [31]. New York had the largest concentration of African Americans in 2019, numbering at 3.8 million [31]. This group tends to be young; 30% of the African American population in the United States is younger than 18 years of age. In 2019, the median age for this group was 35 years (Tamir, 2021). In terms of educational attainment, 87.9% of those 25 years of age and older have a high school diploma or have completed college [31].

ASIAN AMERICANS

As of 2019, 22.9 million Americans identified as Asian [57]. California had the largest concentration of Asians (6.5 million) followed by New York (1.8 million) [57]. Between 2000 and 2019, Asians experienced the greatest growth (81%) compared with any other racial group [133]. Between 2016 and 2017, this group had the highest growth rate at 3.0% [132]. The Chinese group represents the largest Asian subgroup in the United States, and it is projected that this population will grow to 35.7 million between 2015 and 2040 [20,21]. In 2019, Chinese Americans numbered 5.2 million; this number does not include Taiwanese individuals [57]. They also have the highest educational attainment of any racial/ethnic group; 54.6% of Asian Americans 25 years of age and older have a bachelor's degree or higher [57].

"Asian" is a single term widely used to describe individuals who have kinship and identity ties to Asia, including the Far East, Southeast Asia, and the Indian subcontinent [22]. This encompasses countries such as China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, India, Pakistan, and the Philippines. Pacific Islander is often combined with Asian American in census data. The Pacific Islands include Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, Fiji, and many others [22]. There are more than 25 Asian/Pacific Islander groups, each with a different migration history and widely varying sociopolitical environments in their homelands [23].

Asian American groups have differing levels of acculturation, lengths of residency in the United States, languages, English-speaking proficiency, education attainment, socioeconomic statuses, and religions. For example, there are approximately 32 different languages spoken among Asian Americans, and within each Asian subgroup (e.g., Chinese), multiple dialects may be present [23,24]. The diversity of this group makes generalizations difficult.

HISPANICS/LATINOS

The term "Hispanic" refers to individuals who self-identify as having origins in Spain or Spanish-speaking countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Peru, Ecuador, or the Dominican Republic [25]. Persons of Latin American descent or origin are considered Latino/a/x.

In 2019, there were 60.6 million Hispanics in the United States [134]. The majority of the Hispanic population in the United States (63.3%) identify themselves as being of Mexican descent [26]. Approximately 27% of the U.S. Hispanic population identify as Puerto Rican, Cuban, Salvadoran, Dominican, Guatemalan, Colombian, Honduran, Ecuadorian, or Peruvian [26].

As noted, in the United States, Hispanics are the largest minority group, with 58.6 million residents, or 17% of the population [132]. In 2019, they represented 18% of the U.S. population [154]. By 2060, Hispanics are expected to represent 31% of the U.S. population [132]. In 2019, the three states with the largest Hispanic population also had the most growth: Texas, California, and Florida [154].

NATIVE AMERICANS

The Native American population is extremely diverse. According to the U.S. Census, the terms "Native American," "American Indian," or "Alaskan Native" refer to individuals who identify themselves with tribal attachment to indigenous groups of North and South America [29]. In the United States, there are 574 federally recognized tribal governments and 324 federally recognized reservations [135].

In 2019, it was reported that there were 6.9 million Native Americans in the United States, which is approximately 2% of the U.S. population [135]. By 2060, this number is projected to increase to 10.1 million, or 2.5% of the total population [135].

In general, this group is young, with a median age of 31 years, compared with the general median age of 37.9 years [155]. As of 2018, the top five states with the greatest number of residents identifying as Native American are Alaska, Oklahoma, New Mexico, South Dakota, and Montana [156]. In 2016, this group had the highest poverty rate (26.2%) of any racial/ethnic group in the United States [155].

CULTURE, RACE, ETHNICITY, AND CULTURAL COMPETENCE AND AWARENESS

Culture refers to the values and knowledge of groups in a society; it consists of approved behaviors, norms of conduct, and value systems [33,34]. Culture involves attitudes and beliefs that are passed from generation to generation within a group; it is continually evolving and fluid [157]. These patterns include language, religious beliefs, institutions, artistic expressions, ways of thinking, and patterns of social and interpersonal relations [35]. Culture can also represent worldviews—encompassing assumptions and perceptions about the world and how it works [36]. Understanding culture helps to elucidate why groups of people act and respond to the environment as they do [37].

On the other hand, race is linked to biology. Race is partially defined by physical markers, such as skin or hair color [38]. It does not refer to cultural institutions or patterns, but it is generally utilized as a mechanism for classification. In modern history, skin color has been used to classify people and to imply that there are distinct biologic differences within populations [39]. Historically, the census in the United States defined race according to ancestry and blood quantum; today, it is based on self-classification. Racial characteristics are also assigned differential power and privilege, lending to different statuses among groups [40].

Ethnicity is also a complex phenomenon and has been defined in many different ways. Four components of ethnicity have been identified [41]:

  • Social class

  • Political process

  • Traditions

  • Symbolic token

When ethnicity is viewed as social class, the individual's ethnicity is compared to or equated with their socioeconomic class (e.g., working class or lower class). This is most clear in ethnic enclaves, the residents of which have strong cultural and familial ties [42].

Ethnicity may also be associated with persecution, both political and social. Ethnic unity may serve as a tool for social change and political reform [42]. Several famous ethnic movements took place in the 1960s, such as the unification of farm workers headed by César Chávez. Ethnicity has also been viewed as a return to traditions, characterized by a renewed interest in ethnic foods, traditional religious practices, native language, and folklore [42]. Finally, ethnicity is also acknowledged as being a symbolic token, a way for individuals to maintain a nostalgic connection to their homeland [42].

Cultural competence exists on both the individual level (practitioner's self-awareness) and the practitioner-patient relationship level. On an individual level, cultural competence training might focus on the expectations, preferences, and desires of culturally diverse patients or it might focus on practitioners' worldviews and experiences [43]. To focus only on the individual (or micro) level neglects the macro, community, and organizational levels. Cultural competent pain management requires an understanding of the complex interplay of social and cultural factors on individuals' perceptions, behaviors, and access to resources related to pain and pain management on micro, messo, and macro levels [157]. More extensive cultural competence training would help practitioners to see how social, economic, and political forces influence the patient-provider relationship and patients' access to resources [43,123].

For healthcare providers, cultural awareness involves four components [44]:

  • Ability to identify key cultural values of the patient

  • Understanding of how cultural values influence a patient and his/her environment

  • Skills to apply and implement services that are congruent with the patient's value systems

  • Acknowledgement that awareness is a continual journey to learn about different cultural value systems and beliefs and apply them to Western intervention models

Practitioners working with patients experiencing pain should be aware of the patient's cultural value and belief systems and how they impact their pain experience and also how their own cultural background and professional culture/system affects how they view pain. Furthermore, culture can influence access to and utilization of pain management services and medications and provider communication [136; 157]. For the most part, practitioners are trained and socialized from a biomedical tradition [45]. Practitioners should reflect on their own experiences and the values and beliefs they attribute to pain [46]. Furthermore, it is important to exhibit cultural humility by forfeiting the role of expert and learning and understanding the lived experiences of patients living in pain [158].

Take a moment to consider the following self-reflective questions [46].

Pain Experiences in Childhood

  • When you were a child, how did those who cared for you react when you were in pain?

  • How did they expect you to behave when you had a minor injury?

  • How did they encourage you to cope when you had severe pain?

  • How did they encourage you to behave during an injection or procedure?

  • When those who cared for you as a child were in pain, how did they react?

  • What words did they use to describe the pain?

  • How did they cope with their pain?

  • Do you tend to follow their example?

Pain Experiences in Adulthood

  • What painful experiences have you had as an adult (e.g., childbirth, fracture)?

  • How did you express (or not express) your pain?

  • Did the pain cause you fear? What were you afraid of?

  • How did you cope with the pain?

  • How did you want others to react while you were in pain?

Pain Experiences by Patients

  • Have you ever felt uncomfortable with the way a patient was reacting (or not reacting) to pain?

  • What did the patient do that concerned you?

  • Why did you feel that way?

  • Do you make value judgments about patients in pain who:

    • Behave more stoically or expressively than you would in a similar situation?

    • Ask for pain medication frequently or not often enough?

    • Choose treatments you do not believe are effective or with which you are unfamiliar?

    • Belong to a cultural group (e.g., ethnic, linguistic, religious, socioeconomic) different from your own?

  • Do you tend to feel certain reactions to, descriptions of, or treatments for pain are "right" or "wrong?" What about these reactions makes them seem right or wrong?

CULTURAL DEFINITIONS AND EXPRESSION OF PAIN

The complexities of culture, race, and ethnicity and how they influence the meanings, definitions, and expression of pain are not completely understood. Studies have not delineated a clear model or pathway, but there is consensus that pain is more than just a biologic or physiologic response; there appears to be an interplay of biologic, social, psychologic, and environment factors. From a biopsychosocial perspective, how individuals react to a pain stimulus may be influenced by how they were socialized within their familial and cultural background [47]. Alternatively, gate control theory has been used to explain the link between culture and pain. According to this theory, pain is not merely a physiologic response to tissue damage; rather, reactions to pain are based on expectations and perceptions stored in one's memory [2,122,124,126,128,129,130]. Biologically, pain is moderated by a gating mechanism whereby cells block pain in the nervous system. Messages are sent to the brain to "open" or "close" these blocking mechanisms, and cultural memories can affect whether the pain impulses reach the brain [2].

PAIN EXPECTANCY AND ACCEPTANCE

There are two main aspects of pain experience: expectancy and acceptance [48]. Pain expectancy refers to an individual's expectation or anticipation of pain as inevitable and/or inescapable [48]. The inherent degree of pain expectancy will vary from individual to individual. Pain acceptance is an individual's attitude toward pain—the extent one is willing and able to handle and endure pain [48]. Cultural beliefs and norms can influence both pain expectancy and acceptance, as evidenced by studies illustrating differences in pain perception and tolerance in various racial/ethnical groups.

In general, research indicates that African Americans tend to experience pain more intensely and tolerate pain less than their white counterparts [137]. In one study, African American college students rated thermal pain stimuli more unpleasant compared with their white counterparts, but the underlying mechanisms to explain these racial differences are unclear [49]. Another experimental study found that African American women were more sensitive to pain compared to their White counterparts [159]. Some studies have shown that, compared with children from other racial groups, African American children require higher doses of morphine to alleviate pain [137]. These differences may be due to genetic differences in CYP450 2D6 pathway, which is responsible for metabolizing opioids [137].

An experimental study was conducted to examine the extent to which ethnic identity predicts pain sensitivity to three different types of pain—thermal, cold, and ischemic—among African American, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white adults [50]. The researchers found that African American and Hispanic participants demonstrated lower tolerance to cold and heat pain compared to their white counterparts. The researchers suggest that chronic stress, socialization in exhibiting pain, and acculturation could all play a role in explaining such ethnic differences [50].

In a study that compared pain levels of Latino and white adults, a pain stimulus was administered (i.e., a blood pressure cuff was inflated and held for three minutes). In general, Latinos reported greater pain compared to their white counterparts [138]. A separate study examined the role of acculturation on pain perception in a sample of undergraduate Asian American and white students [51]. Research participants were engaged in a cold pressor task (immersing their non-dominant hand in a cold-water bath for as long as tolerable) to trigger acute pain. Pain response was higher for first-generation Asian Americans, who removed their hands earlier than other study participants, demonstrating lower pain tolerance. This finding was replicated in a 2018 study that found higher levels of acculturation among Asian American participants correlated with greater heat pain tolerance [160]. Again, it was speculated that acculturative stress and chronic stress pertaining to immigration (including experiences with discrimination and racism) made this group more sensitive to pain [51]. This sensitivity could be triggered by physiologic exhaustion and reduced coping mechanisms resulting from such chronic stress [51].

LANGUAGE USED TO EXPRESS PAIN

The terms used to describe pain are also influenced by culture. Women tend to use more expressive language when communicating pain, tending to use words such as "throbbing," "sharp," and "stabbing" [161]. Men tend to use less expressive language, perhaps due to cultural norms supporting stoicism for men. For example, in a study with Somali women, the participants used the same word to describe a host of painful circumstances ranging from cuts and fevers to childbirth, because the Somali term xanuun means both pain and illness [52]. In another study, terms such as "pain," "ache," and "hurt" were used by Hispanics, Native Americans, African Americans, and whites to refer to painful events or conditions [53]. However, the terms conveyed a different level of pain severity and intensity depending on the race/ethnicity of the subject. In a study conducted to explore racial differences in descriptors employed by African American and white American patients who had experienced myocardial infarction, African Americans were more likely to use "atypical" descriptions for their pain, such as "sharp" or "miseries" [54,55]. One study found that older African Americans tended not to use the word "pain," as this term is reserved for severe discomfort, and instead used the terms "hurt" or "sore" [16]. More bothersome pain was described as "nagging" or "miserable." In a study of Cantonese Chinese individuals in Hong Kong, 597 different pain descriptor terms were distinguished [56]. In a study with participants from Cameroon, French-speaking females were more likely to use the word "crying" to connote an emotional state associated with the pain [162]. However, those who spoke Pidgin did not refer to pain physically (i.e., as a sickness) rather than an emotional state [162].

Some cultural groups have languages that are rooted in storytelling and symbols, and descriptions of pain in these groups may include vivid imagery. In a study with 10 Native Americans, the participants tended to use terminology rooted in nature to describe their pain [58]. Terms like "stretching," "throbbing," and "pulling" were common, and neuropathic pain was described as "hot lava," "freezing," "sparks," and "electric shocks." Some Native American participants employed the word "ache" even for extreme pain [163]. In a study of 101 Nepalese patients diagnosed with chronic musculoskeletal pain, 52% used metaphors (e.g., "like an infection," "like an ant bite," "like sleeping hands/feet") to describe the intensity or quality of their pain [139].

The underlying meanings of phrases are equally important. For example, descriptions of pain may be laced with underlying pride and achievement or fatalistic undertones. Some groups, including African Americans, Chinese, Koreans, and Mexican Americans, may view pain as an inevitable part of life, which can affect the way in which pain is experienced and described [59]. Other pain expressions may reflect idioms of distress, describing suffering in a cultural meaningful manner [164]. However, it is important not to stereotype and not to pathologize a group, as there is a tremendous amount of within-group diversity [60].

MEANINGS AND DEFINITIONS OF PAIN

Individuals construct and attach different meanings to pain (referred to as pain cognitions). These meanings are linked to personal and/or cultural beliefs and norms and at times, religious or spiritual beliefs [165]. A common theme in many cultures is that pain is a part of the human experience [2]. In these cases, coping with pain with stoicism and a high degree of self-control is highly valued because it is part of learning key lessons in life [2]. In some cultures, children are told stories of heroes who meet challenges head on and who do not complain about their suffering [140]. The goal is to socialize children (and adults, by extension) to cope with life's challenges and pain with resiliency and stoicism. For these patients, complaints will be avoided; it is more important to be perceived as a "good patient" [141].

In many Hispanic cultures, for example, life is believed to be full of trials that should be met and accepted with patience and without complaining [2]. Qualitative studies have found that Mexican Americans tend to believe that it is their duty (to God, their family, and community) to endure pain stoically [61,62,142]. The cultural value of machismo also has a functional role in health beliefs and behaviors. Part of machismo is the belief that men should be protectors and providers. Being in pain is viewed as contrary to these roles; therefore, being healthy is essential to fulfilling one's role as a man [166].

This value has been linked to the stoicism and duty promoted in Aztec and Mayan cultures. For these individuals, pain is not just a physical experience but encompasses social, familial, interpersonal, and spiritual factors as well. Some patients may feel that pain is bestowed by God and/or is part of familial or societal obligations. By extension, they may consider caring for others in pain to be an important or even sacred duty [62]. In these cases, perceptions of pain are clearly linked to religious and spiritual views.

Many Asian cultures also adhere to similar definitions and views about pain. For example, in Chinese culture, pain has three philosophical/religious foundations: Taoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism [5]. Taoism argues for harmony with the environment, whereby people live and adapt themselves to the order of nature [5; 167]. In terms of pain, Taoism argues that pain occurs if qi, the life energy, is blocked; resolution of pain requires the individual to restore harmony with the universe [5]. In Chinese medicine, five elements play a role in health: water, fire, wood, metal, and earth. The goal is to keep all five elements in balance. Imbalances (e.g., dampness and cold) can affect the body and cause pain [168]. Buddhism regards pain as a part of the human experience that must be experienced alone, with the knowledge that it is a temporary state. Finally, Confucianism focuses on adhering to a social order, in which loyalty to parents and family is paramount. According to this philosophy, pain is also a part of life and serves as a reminder of humanity [5; 167]. Knowledge of this background provides a frame of reference when working with Chinese patients and attempting to understand how they might construct meaning and what types of interventions may be most appropriate [5]. Many Chinese patients will avoid verbalizing their pain or suppress moans of pain, because stoicism is a highly valued cultural virtue [143]. They may not report pain until it becomes unbearable.

In a qualitative study, non-Hispanic White and Native American participants' terminologies to describe injury and the role of pain were explored [169]. Non-Hispanic White individuals were slightly more likely to use the word "pain" and believed that pain symptoms were an underlying manifestation of some illness or abnormality. Native American participants tended to ascribe pain to cultural and historical events. Native Americans were also more likely to view pain within the larger holistic context of the mind, body, emotions, and spirit [63]. As such, pain treatment should address each of these dimensions. In one study, individuals in rural Nepal reported the belief that pain is part of the aging process and is endured without the need to seek help [170].

In a study of black Caribbean and white patients being treated for cancer, the black Caribbean patients were more likely to attribute their cancer (and related pain) to a testing of their faith (i.e., loyalty to God) and to consider the diagnosis to be an opportunity to strengthen and confirm their religious beliefs [64]. Because the meanings of pain are interwoven with religion and spirituality, it is not surprising that pain is linked to past sins and immoral behaviors in many cultural groups. Similarly, some cultural groups attribute the cause of pain to mysticism or "the evil eye" [144]. Some patients may feel that their pain is a result of wrongdoing—a justifiable retribution [64]. In some religions, prayer and other religious rituals may be done as a means to cope and atone for sins [65]. Similarly, some cultures believe pain symptoms are the result of an imbalance or a lack of harmony and may seek traditional healers to restore order (e.g., by performing a ritual or ceremony) [66].

EXPRESSING/COMMUNICATING PAIN

Communication consists of verbal and nonverbal components, both of which are embedded within the culture of the parties disseminating and receiving the information. In the context of pain, the term "pain response" is used to refer to the verbal (e.g., wailing, verbal complaints about pain symptoms) and nonverbal (e.g., facial expressions, body gestures) expressions of pain [67]. In order to understand how culture influences the communication of and coping with pain, it is first important to understand the role of high- and low-context cultures within the larger perspective of communication styles.

Styles of communication can be classified on a continuum from high to low context [68]. High-context cultures rely on shared experience, implicit messages, nonverbal cues, and the relationship between the two parties to disseminate information [69]. Members of these cultural groups tend to listen with their eyes and focus on how something was said or conveyed [68,70]. On the other hand, low-context cultures rely on verbal communication, or what is explicitly stated in the conversation [69]. Consequently, low-context communicators listen with their ears and focus on what is being said [68,70]. Western culture, including the United States, can be classified as a low-context culture. On the other hand, groups from collectivistic cultures, such as Asian/Pacific Islanders, Hispanics, Native Americans, and African Americans, are considered high context [68]. Clearly, adherence to cultural values influences communication styles. Cross-cultural communication is by no means simple, and there is no set of rules by which to abide. Instead, promoting culturally sensitive communication is an art that requires practitioners to self-reflect, be self-aware, and be willing to learn. Therefore, as practitioners become skilled in noticing nonverbal behaviors and how they relate to their own behaviors and emotions, they will be more able to understand their own level of discomfort and comprehend behavior from a cultural perspective [70].

In-depth interviews with Somalian women living in Sweden revealed that their pain is often communicated through body language as opposed to explicit verbal expression [52]. Most of the women indicated that they had experienced pain symptoms for a long time before communicating them to others. To be extremely expressive with one's pain (e.g., loud crying, wailing) was also viewed as unacceptable [52]. Similarly, in a qualitative study with Chinese women, the participants believed that pain should be dealt with stoically [71]. A separate study found that Asian Indian students were less likely to find overt expressions of pain acceptable compared with their American-born Indian counterparts [67]. Native Americans prefer to "block" all discussion and thoughts of pain [72].

Conversely, some cultural groups may be more likely to directly express pain. Studies have observed greater willingness to overtly express pain in American society, with a greater tendency to seek help from pain professionals and prescribed analgesics [67,73].

COPING WITH PAIN

Coping is defined as the use of behavioral and cognitive strategies to relieve the internal or external environmental stressors that stretch an individual's strengths and resources [74]. These strategies have been categorized as active or passive. Active coping strategies are characterized by directive problem-solving techniques, actively seeking social support, and employing reappraisal methods to reassess the situation. Meanwhile, passive coping strategies emphasize avoidance and utilizing techniques such as distancing, escaping, wishful thinking, and self-control [75]. In terms of coping or managing pain, individuals employing active coping strategies would attempt to stay busy, focus less on the pain, place their energies on another activity, and continue with normal activities of daily living [76]. Meanwhile, those in pain employing passive coping strategies may escape the pain by using wishful thinking, venting, or catastrophic thought patterns [76]. Some studies have found that active coping methods and positive reappraisals assist in improving well-being among individuals experiencing pain; those who use passive coping strategies such as wishful thinking and blaming oneself have poorer levels of well-being [77]. Catastrophizing is a coping method whereby one focuses on the pain stimulus, overstates the threat of the pain, and ultimately holds the belief that one cannot handle the pain [78]. Not surprisingly, this coping strategy is related to experiencing higher levels of pain, increased use of medication, and increased use of healthcare services across different age groups and different types of pain [78,79].

Certain cultures/ethnicities display a greater tendency for catastrophizing, which may be at least partially explained by a culture categorization of collectivistic or individualistic. Individualistic cultures place an emphasis on individuality and an internal locus of control, with challenges often attributed to modifiable environmental factors [80]. In general, white European and American cultures tend to be individualistic. Those from individualistic cultures are believed to be more likely to use active coping strategies in order to "manipulate" their environment to deal with pain and more likely to withdraw into themselves [52]. Collectivistic cultures emphasize the collective unit, interpersonal relationships, and the support system, and those from collectivistic cultures often display an external locus of control [81]. Many racial/minority groups are categorized as collectivistic cultures. In general, individuals from collectivistic cultures tend to rely more on passive coping strategies in order to reduce internal feelings of helplessness and stress [80]. A systematic review of Hispanic Americans found that this group tended to employ catastrophizing more than their non-Hispanic white counterparts [142]. African Americans also exhibit higher levels of catastrophizing and related increased pain sensitivity [82,145].

African Americans have also historically relied on religion and spirituality to cope with racism and discrimination, and this appears to also extend to other challenges, including pain [145]. In a study of 939 veterans with chronic arthritis pain, African Americans were more likely to view a prayer as a helpful method and to use prayer and hope to cope with pain compared with their white counterparts [74]. In a systematic review, African Americans employed coping strategies that included prayer, catastrophizing, hoping, distraction, and problem solving more frequently to deal with pain compared with White patients. White patients attempted to ignore the pain more often than African Americans [171].

Hispanic Americans also depend on religion for pain-coping. Among this population, talking to a priest or a pastor is viewed as part of pain management, and asking God to help alleviate pain is a coping mechanism for many Hispanics [142]. It is important to support patients' spiritual coping while also providing education on other pain management options (e.g., medication) [16].

The theme of self-control (a passive coping method) is also prevalent among many racial and ethnic minority groups. In a small study with 35 African American patients recruited from oncology clinics, participants stated that continually talking about pain would amplify it and make them feel even more helpless and out of control. Family and the community were identified as important, but constantly talking about pain with family members was believed to push them away [83].

The question of whether religious coping (e.g., praying, seeking comfort in faith) is an example of active or passive coping has been raised. A study of 200 Latino patients with arthritis pain found that there was a positive relationship between active coping and religious coping [76]. For these patients, use of religious coping was also associated with greater psychologic well-being and adjustment [76]. However, some argue that prayer, hope, and meditation are examples of passive coping and lead to poor adjustment to pain [146].

In a study of Native Americans' cancer pain experience, participants navigated a fine line between privacy and reliance on communal support [58]. By using traditional native ceremonies, rituals, and prayers, they bring together their tribal relations for healing, coping, and support. Yet participants expressed concern about safeguarding their privacy, as tribal communities are often closed systems.

Use of pain coping strategies is not static [157]. For immigrants, strategies can alter over time as they become familiar with cultural norms of the host country, Western biomedical interventions, and different self-management strategies. The key is for practitioners to avoid stereotyping and pathologizing patients' belief systems.

HELP SEEKING

Help seeking consists of the ways (formal and informal) in which individuals request assistance due to distress [84]. Understanding individuals' patterns of help seeking allows for a greater appreciation of their attitudes toward pain and pain management. Asking for either formal or informal assistance implies different meanings in different cultures.

Saint Arnault proposed the Cultural Determinants of Help Seeking Model, which posits that there are three major dimensions that influence how assistance is sought: perceptions and labeling, interpretations of meaning, and social context dynamics [85].

Perceptions and Labeling

The sensations experienced by an individual are first perceived and labeled as a "symptom" or a form of atypical or abnormal state, which is perceived as distressing. This is then sifted through a specific cultural lens. As discussed, members of various cultural groups will have different levels of pain sensitivity and tolerance, and some groups will define a stimulus as "painful" while others will not [85].

Interpretations of Meaning

When an event is perceived as distressing, the individual will then attribute meaning to the symptom. Two types of attributions can be made: attributions of social significance or causal attributions. A social significance attribution involves an individual attaching a positive or negative social significance to the event. For example, a patient might believe that pain is reflective of a personal failure or character flaw [85].

Causal attribution involves attempting to determine the source(s) of a symptom or event (e.g., physical, psychologic/emotional, or environmental factors) [86]. The method of help seeking is often partially influenced by causal attribution. For example, if pain is perceived to be emotionally rooted, then the individual might seek mental health or counseling services. In a study of 1,570 adults in Hong Kong, 25% attributed chronic pain to excessive physical work and self-treated with rest [147]. In Chinese cultures, pain may be attributed to an imbalance of yin and yang, with help then sought through acupuncture or herbal medications [5]. In cultures that believe pain is the result of spiritual unrest or imbalance (e.g., Hmong, Native American), patients may seek help from a traditional healer, shaman, or spiritual advisor [59,72]. Some racial/ethnic minority patients (e.g., Navajo Indians) may be reluctant to seek help in places where people have died, including hospitals [66].

Social Context Dynamics

Finally, an individual's social, economic, and familial environment will affect help seeking. The availability of resources (e.g., social network system, community, neighborhood, workplace, institutional organizations) will influence the type and extent of help available. In addition, social rules of exchange (e.g., who can partake in the resources, under what circumstances, and when they should be reciprocated) may also affect help seeking. Collectivistic cultures are more likely to provide assistance to members in their group, and it is expected that the individual will rely first on his or her family before seeking outside help [85]. Meanwhile, individualistic cultures expect that individuals will first attempt to address and resolve the problem alone. After having taxed internal and external resources, they will then seek outside help [85].

FACTORS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN PAIN MANAGEMENT

It is clear that health disparities exist among racial and ethnic minority groups, and this is true for pain management services and medications. A large-scale national study in the United States found racial differences in the prescription of analgesics for patients with migraine, low back pain, and bone fractures [87]. Specifically, African Americans were less likely to be prescribed analgesics for their pain compared with their white counterparts. Racial minority patients are also more likely to experience longer wait times for medication compared with white patients [16].

In a 2019 large-scale survey, African American patients were 6% and 7% less likely to receive opioids for abdominal pain and back pain, respectively, compared with White patients [172]. Hispanics were 6% and 14.8% less likely to be given opioids for abdominal and back pain, respectively, compared with White patients [172]. Analysis of a national dataset found that African Americans were less likely to be prescribed opioids for back pain and abdominal pain compared with non-Hispanic white Americans [148]. The authors speculate that racial biases may influence prescribing behaviors. An examination of Medicaid patients who received epidural analgesia during vaginal childbirth also found statistically significant racial/ethnic differences [88]. In this study, 59.6% of the white patients received epidural analgesia, compared with 49.5% of African Americans, 48.2% of Asians, and 35.2% of Hispanics. Even after the researchers controlled for age, urban/rural residence, and the availability of anesthesiologists, race and ethnicity still predicted epidural analgesia prescribing trends [88].

In a meta-analysis of ethnicity and pain management, researchers found that professionals under-rated ethnic minority patients' levels of pain and were less likely to indicate their pain scores on their charts compared with their white counterparts [89]. In addition, African American and Hispanic patients were less likely to have been given analgesics than white patients.

Many factors contribute to these racial disparities. One factor may revolve around practitioners' underlying biases, stereotypes, and mistaken assumptions, also referred to as implicit bias. For example, some practitioners may falsely attribute some level of innate "toughness" to African American patients based on the groups' history of overcoming oppression and trauma [173]. Others may have an explicit or implicit belief that minority patients are more likely to misuse prescribed opioids [174].

Studies have not definitively isolated the factors that contribute to these disparities. One of the challenges in understanding health disparities, and particularly pain management disparities, is the fact that racial and ethnic minority groups are heterogeneous [90,125]. Recent immigrants from Japan, for example, are going to be very different from native-born Japanese who have resided in the United States for generations [90]. However, researchers have often combined these groups, as challenges in recruitment yield small sample sizes that make it difficult for statistical analyses to be meaningful. The literature has identified a variety of reasons for these disparities stemming from several factors [91].

BARRIERS RELATED TO WESTERN BIOMEDICAL CULTURE

Western biomedical culture emphasizes a clear dichotomy between the mind and the body as well as what is observable (objective) and what is not (subjective) [92]. Pain is not easily measured, making its assessment and treatment a challenge in Western medicine [92]. In addition, many healthcare professionals may not be adequately trained to incorporate spirituality in the management and treatment of pain for patients who desire to incorporate a more holistic approach [93]. The Western American medical paradigm also leans toward cure rather than care [92]. Patients who present with symptoms that lead to a diagnosis for which there is a clear pathway of interventions and treatment are "favored." Because of the subjective nature of pain, healthcare professionals must often make clinical decisions in the face of a lack of absolute, clear physical evidence [94].

SOCIETAL AND INSTITUTIONAL BARRIERS

Societal and institutional barriers include racism, discrimination, poverty, lack of health insurance, and deleterious environmental factors in communities [7]. For example, groups that have historically (or currently) been victims of institutional racism and discrimination are more likely to delay seeking help for pain [89]. For example, some studies indicate that African American men may experience higher levels of pain intensity in part due to their experiences with different forms of racial discrimination [16]. Even today, racial and ethnic minority patients are more likely to be placed in a negative valenced relationship [94]. In the context of pain management, healthcare providers are more likely to discount the pain due to the negative valenced relationship triggered by racism and discrimination [94].

It has been shown that physicians tend to have less involved communication and less participatory interactions with racial minority patients and low-income patients [92]. In one study, when Hispanic patients visited physicians for back pain, their encounters were 1.6 minutes shorter compared with non-Hispanic White patient visits [172]. In addition, the stereotype that certain racial minority groups come from chaotic and disorganized families and environments increases the likelihood of healthcare professionals labeling them as "difficult." Just as healthcare professionals may have preconceived notions about patients, patients may have pre-existing assumptions about the provider. For example, one study of Native American patients found that the participants tended to feel that healthcare professionals were not interested in hearing about their pain experience and did not have confidence that they would be helped [72]. Thus, a cycle of myths and stereotypes continues.

One oft-cited study found that three-quarters of pharmacies located in areas of New York City with a high proportion of racial and ethnic minority residents did not stock adequate supplies of opioid analgesics [95]. One study found that only 25% of pharmacies in a predominately racial/ethnic-minority neighborhood were well supplied with opioids, compared with 72% in predominantly White neighborhoods [163]. Some pharmacists attributed the low supply to lower demand, but others cited factors related to racism and discrimination. In addition, pharmacies in areas with high concentrations of racial minorities are more concerned with burglaries, additional regulations, and penalties imposed by state and federal drug-enforcement agencies than pharmacies in predominantly white neighborhoods [95].

HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONAL-RELATED BARRIERS

Healthcare professional barriers may include professionals' beliefs about appropriate pain management; lack of training and knowledge about the intersection of pain and culture, race, and ethnicity; lack of culturally sensitive assessment for pain; and expectations about racial and ethnic minority pain patients based on stereotypes [96]. For example, the belief that African Americans' skin is thicker than White skin and therefore experiences less pain is a common myth [175]. Consequently, practitioners may underestimate and minimize racial minority patients' pain experiences. In a qualitative study, Native American individuals described their complaints of pain being dismissed, receiving inadequate care, and neglected aftercare [149].

Studies have also shown that the language and race/ethnicity of the healthcare professional influences pain management. For example, the ratings of pain tend to be comparable when the patient and healthcare provider speak the same language. When there is a native language, pain ratings tend to diverge. When literacy and language barriers are eliminated, assessment and treatment improves and racial and ethnic minority patients with pain fare better [146]. In addition, healthcare professionals' level of empathy appears to increase when the patient and healthcare professional share the same skin color or are of the same ethnic group [97,131].

PATIENT-RELATED BARRIERS

Patient barriers to effective pain management include fear and anxiety about substance misuse and addiction, cultural values such as fatalism (i.e., pain is inevitable), and ideas about being a good patient [91]. Cultural values about pain coping, definitions, expression, and experience may also be patient-related barriers. For example, those with a fatalistic perspective of pain are often stoic. A qualitative study of Somali women found that the participants felt wailing or crying about one's pain was a sign of weakness [52]. Similarly, Hispanics and African Americans are more likely to embrace the importance of being stoic and are less likely to ask for pain medication [89]. Sometimes, stoicism is tied to historical experiences with oppression and trauma. In a 2015 study, Aboriginal people in two rural communities indicated that mistrust of Western medicine kept them from expressing their pain [176]. Studies also show that Hispanic and African American patients with cancer tend to under-report their pain for fear of being labeled as complainers or of distracting their physicians treating their illness [98]. Some patients will not ask questions for fear that would be viewed challenging an authority figure [143]. Some ethnic/racial minority patients disclose that they avoid pain medications because they overestimate the risk dependence [99,141,143].

CULTURALLY SENSITIVE ASSESSMENT OF PAIN

It is important to remember that assessment is an ongoing process. Practitioners may use closed-ended and open-ended assessment questions to evaluate the patient's level of pain. A combination of closed- and open-ended assessment questions is recommended, as they both have their merits and limitations.

CLOSED-ENDED QUESTION PAIN RATING SCALES

Pain rating scales can be categorized as either unidimensional or multidimensional. As the term indicates, unidimensional scales assign a number to a single dimension of a concept. For example, a unidimensional scale might measure pain intensity. Typically, these scales are easy to administer and cost and time effective [100]. Examples of unidimensional pain scales include a numerical pain rating scale, a visual analog scale, and a verbal descriptor scale. All these pain-rating scales are self-reports from the patient, which is the most reliable regardless of age, communication, or any other factor [150].

Unidimensional Pain Scales

Unidimensional pain scales measure the patient's self-reported pain intensity [150]. The numerical pain rating scale is a self-report scale whereby the practitioner asks the patient to rate their pain on a scale of 1 to 10 or 1 to 100 (from least to most severe) [100]. Some patients, particularly those with lower English proficiency, may have difficulty using numerical ratings to convey changes in pain quality and intensity over time [158]. Choosing a favorite number or a sacred or meaningful number is common in some groups [163].

With the visual analog scale, the patient is asked to mark her or his current level of pain on a horizontal line, where one end of the continuum is anchored with "no pain" and the other end is anchored with "extreme pain" [100]. It has been argued that this scale is more sensitive than the numerical pain rating scale [100]. Finally, a verbal descriptor scale asks the patient to consider his or her level of pain, and it consists of several numerically ranked adjectives or verbal descriptors. For example, 0 means "no pain," 1 is "mild," 2 is "moderate," 3 is "severe," and 4 is "unbearable" [101]. The problem with the verbal descriptor scale is that because pain is subjective, the descriptors may only be an artificial assessment of the patient's perceived pain. For example, the term "severe" and "unbearable" may have different connotations for each individual [101]. A review of articles written on these three scales concluded that they all have good validity and reliability and are practical for clinical purposes [102]. Generally, patients appear to have more challenges in understanding the visual analogue scale than the verbal descriptor or numeric rating scales. The numerical rating scale has good sensitivity and appears to be the easiest to use and comprehend [102]. The most popular unidimension pain scales are the numeric rating scale, the visual analog scale, and the verbal rating/descriptor scale [150].

Multidimensional Pain Scales

Multidimensional scales for pain assess for more than one attribute or dimension of pain [101]. Examples of multidimensional scales for pain include (but are not limited to) the McGill Pain Questionnaire, the Brief Pain Inventory, the Dartmouth Pain Questionnaire, and the West Haven-Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory. The McGill Pain Questionnaire is one of the most popular multidimensional measures of the sensory, affective, and evaluative dimensions of pain, assessing both pain intensity and quality [100,103]. There are a set of descriptors for each of the three dimensions, and the original long form takes 10 to 15 minutes to administer and assesses nearly 100 dimensions of pain. However, a shortened version of the form consisting of 15 sensory and affective descriptors and a verbal rating of the pain's level and duration takes only 2 to 5 minutes to administer [100,104]. Although it is not a substitute for the long-form version, the shorter instrument is reliable when limited time is available [104].

The Brief Pain Inventory measures a patient's pain intensity in terms of sensory pain experienced and interference with life. It also assesses pain relief, pain quality, and patient views about the causes of the pain [105]. The Brief Pain Inventory is comprised of 32 items, with the patient selecting his or her responses on a scale of 0 to 10. The original long-form version takes about 15 minutes to administer [105]. The short form is similar and inquires about pain intensity and pain interference using a rating scale and the percentage of pain relief by analgesics [105].

Closed-Ended Pain Assessment Scales and Culture

It is important to consider if instruments that have originally been developed for and targeted to white patients will be culturally appropriate for use with racial and ethnic minorities. As discussed throughout this course, pain is highly subjective and is influenced by language and culture. Taking this into consideration, many of the closed-ended item question pain rating scales have been adapted for cultural and racial/ethnic minority groups.

The numerical rating scale was translated (and back-translated) into Swahili for use in Kenya and pilot tested with 15 individuals 8 to 69 years of age. In general, the participants understood what the progression of the numbers conveyed and thought the scale was easy to understand, with good face validity [106]. However, some studies have shown that linear numerical scales are conceptualized differently based on a group's cultural norms. For example, one study found that Native American patients selected a number on the rating scale not to reflect their pain but because it had symbolic and sacred connotations to them [93,107]. Language is another consideration. The number four is nearly homophonous with the Mandarin word for "death," and therefore, some Chinese patients will be less likely to select this number on the pain rating scale.

The visual analogue scale is typically presented on a horizontal scale, which can present problems in come cultural groups. For example, because some traditional Asian languages are read down vertically, unlike European languages, which are read horizontally left to right, respondents in one study could not comprehend the visual analogue [108]. As such, modification of the scale may be necessary for these populations.

The revised Iowa Pain Thermometer (IPT-r) and the revised Faces Pain Scale have also been demonstrated to be valid and reliable for older African Americans [16]. Both instruments are pictorial (i.e., a thermometer and a set of faces).

Older African American adults tend to prefer the verbal descriptor rating scale, which is generally valid and reliable for this population [16]. Furthermore, it has also been adapted for use with racial and ethnic minority groups. Translation of the verbal descriptors into Chinese and translation back into English resulted in the following terms, from most to least painful [108]:

  • Crucifying pain

  • Crushing the heart and lungs

  • Excruciating pain

  • Unbearable

  • Indescribable

  • Very painful

  • Painful

  • Bearable

  • Quite painful

  • Slight pain

  • No pain

The McGill Pain Questionnaire has been translated into 26 different languages including Chinese, Korean, Spanish, Italian, German, Turkish, Japanese, Dutch, German, Greek, and Norwegian, and it has been validated among various cultural groups [109,110,111].

One study found that the term "pain" was used to describe severe intensity versus terms like "ache" and "hurt" for less intense pain [53]. This trend was observed among Hispanics, Native Americans, African Americans, and non-Hispanic whites. In another study using medical records of 268 Hispanic and non-Hispanic white patients, the McGill Pain Questionnaire was equally reliable for both groups [112]. However, there were statistically significant differences in the five descriptor items (i.e., throbbing, gnawing, aching, tiring-exhausting, and sickening).

The Brief Pain Inventory has also been adapted for use with other groups. Not only has it been translated into and validated for several languages (e.g., Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Thai, Taiwanese, Norwegian, Spanish, Russian, Italian, Greek, Portuguese, Hindi, Polish), it has been found to be valid and reliable for many groups [113]. For example, in a study of 534 Taiwanese patients with cancer, the researchers found the Taiwanese version was reliable for both pain intensity and interference scales [114]. A study with 143 Brazilian patients from outpatient cancer clinics showed good validity and reliability with the Portuguese version [115]. Analyses also demonstrated good correlation with the McGill Pain Questionnaire [115].

OPEN-ENDED ASSESSMENT QUESTIONS

Because pain is highly subjective, some argue that a numerical score calculated from pain instruments does not capture the underlying meanings and experiences of pain. Consequently, asking open-ended questions and paying close attention to both verbal and nonverbal cues are essential to understanding a patient's pain [71]. Experts recommend asking the following questions [116]:

  • What do you call your pain? What term do you use to describe your pain?

  • Why do you think you have this pain?

  • How bad is the pain? Does it last a long time? A short time? Can you be specific?

  • What are you most afraid about what you are experiencing?

  • How has the pain affected you?

  • What types of treatment and remedies have you received?

  • What types of treatment and remedies do you think would be most helpful? What would be the most important outcomes from the treatment?

  • Who do you talk with about your pain? What do they know?

  • Who helps you cope with the pain you are experiencing?

Because many racial and ethnic minority patients value the role of stoicism, use of the term "pain" may not be conducive to engaging patients in conversations about their condition. The practitioner should first ask the patient which term she or he prefers to use to describe the pain [89]. Prompting with alternate terms (e.g., "nagging," "sore") may be helpful [16]. Developing good rapport and trust can help overcome stoicism and allow practitioners to identify nonverbal pain indicators (e.g., tenseness, grimacing, flinching) [143]. As trust between patients and providers develops, both will gradually let go of their own biases and cultural stereotypes [151]. Asking patients for their opinions and views and spending more time listening than talking will build trust. It is important to allow the patient to tell their pain story without interruption [177].

It is important to remember that patients are the experts on the pain they are experiencing. When patients tell their own narratives/stories, clinicians will have a better understanding of their meanings of pain, coping mechanisms, and impact of family and social support [151]. Patients should also be reassured that reporting pain is not complaining [16].

PAIN MANAGEMENT AND INTERVENTIONS

PATIENT EDUCATION AND EMPOWERMENT

Education and empowerment work hand in hand. The Western biomedical culture often reduces pain to the physiologic symptoms and sensations, but pain is not merely about physiology, and focusing only on "curing" pain can result in patients forfeiting their sense of control and responsibility and becoming passive agents [117,118]. If patients are educated and empowered, they can become more resourceful in managing their pain and become active agents in their treatment [118]. In the context of pain treatment, the main components of empowerment are [118,127]:

  • Multidisciplinary pain management, with patients offered an option of resources that best suit their needs and value systems

  • Education

  • Inclusion of patients in the decision-making process

  • Optimistic communication and hope that positive outcomes could result

  • Connection with others who are going through similar experiences

  • Compassion (e.g., active listening)

Practitioners' conveyance of compassion is important because patients being treated for pain often fear that no one believes their pain is real.

When working with racial and ethnic minorities, it is crucial for practitioners to remember that the concept of individualism is more embraced by Western cultures that place more emphasis on the concept of autonomy. When it comes to pain management, empowering patients assumes that they have a level of responsibility to manage their pain. However, many cultures place more value on collectivism. In these cases, practitioners should explore the role of the family, community, and other support networks that may be involved in the patient's pain management [45].

The concept of continuing social roles and not taking time to rest despite pain may be more common among racial and ethnic minority groups [178]. Practitioners can include education on the importance of balancing rest and self-care along with the challenges of continuing with life roles [178].

Practitioners should also consider health literacy and English proficiency when working with immigrants and racial minorities [141]. Reader-friendly materials in a variety of languages are needed to disseminate pain information.

ROLE OF COUNSELING

Because pain is a multifaceted phenomenon, it is important for patients to consider pursuing an integrated system of care for their pain. This involves looking into the emotional and psychologic component of pain [117]. Mental health and social service providers can assist patients in identifying and discussing the meanings of their pain experience. Many racial and ethnic minority patients do not adhere to a dichotomy between the mind and body and may be more open to talking about pain's link to their emotions and life circumstances. A study conducted with patients at a pain center compared the attitudes of Puerto Rican patients with non-Hispanic white patients [45]. White patients disclosed feeling that their pain was being discounted or negated if their physicians asked psychosocial-related questions about the pain. In general, these patients wanted pharmacologic interventions and were upset by suggestions that their pain was potentially psychologically and/or emotionally rooted [45]. However, the Puerto Rican patients did not express any complaints when their physicians inquired about family, community, relationships, and other psychosocial factors that might be linked to their pain symptoms [45].

Cognitive-behavioral therapies have been widely employed for patients being treated for chronic pain. Alone, this type of therapy does not relieve pain symptoms [28]. Instead, techniques such as reframing, guided imagery, distraction, and identifying cognitive distortions such as catastrophizing and black-and-white thinking (i.e., all or nothing) can help patients understand how cognitions can influence pain and related behaviors [119]. The resultant improvements in coping can enhance quality of life [28]. There are four main goals when working from this paradigm [117]:

  • Reframing with patients that their pain is manageable (i.e., patients can be taught to have the positive attitude that they have control over their pain)

  • Assisting patients to monitor and track their pain symptoms and link their symptoms to external and internal psychosocial challenges

  • Teaching new ways for patients to think about their problems (i.e., identifying maladaptive cognitive distortions) and new ways of coping

  • Educating patients about different ways to use relaxation techniques as coping techniques

Because religion and spirituality are central to the lives of many racial and ethnic minority patients, it is important to understand how they use religion and spirituality to understand and cope with their pain symptoms [120]. Practitioners may employ cognitive-behavioral techniques to help patients identify religious cognitive distortion. An example of a pain-related cognition is: "Pain is a symptom of guilt." A religious cognition might be: "God is good and fair. My pain is a symptom of my guilt from sin." This then yields a cognitive distortion: "My pain is a consequence of my sins, and I deserve it" [119]. Practitioners can teach patients to identify these types of cognitive distortions, challenge their validity, and identify problem-solving strategies, reframing, and positive reappraisals [119]. These patients should be encouraged to employ positive religious coping strategies such as prayer, meditation, and confession.

ALTERNATIVE REMEDIES

Practitioners should explore both traditional biomedical pain management interventions and non-traditional alternative remedies (as appropriate) when working with racial and ethnic minority patients. Complementary self-management approaches for pain can be generally classified as mind/body approaches or natural products [152]. Self-management is a common and primary method of managing pain among Asian immigrants. Use of exercise, traditional Chinese medicine, nutrition, and general physical activity are typical and perceived as culturally appropriate [178].

Mind/body approaches include meditation, yoga, acupuncture, and breathing techniques. Natural products include herbs, vitamins, and topical ointments [152]. Some patients may be more receptive to traditional healing methods (e.g., herbal remedies, traditional healers) [72]. In focus groups, Native American participants reported using a range of alternative therapies for pain, including acupuncture, massage, chiropractic treatment, and guided imagery [149].

Alternative remedies for pain can be classified into five different areas, and many can be used as adjuncts to conventional therapies [121,153]:

  • Alternative medications: Nonpharmacologic substances, such as those associated with homeopathic medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, and Ayurveda medicine

  • Mind-body interventions: Interventions that focus on using the mind to influence bodily symptoms, including biofeedback, meditation, music therapy, and guided imagery. Mind-body interventions help reduce pain and improve other comorbid conditions, such as depression.

  • Biologically based interventions: Consumption of biologic products (e.g., herbs, vitamins, foods)

  • Manipulation strategies: Adjustment of focused areas of the body (e.g., chiropractic measures, massage, acupuncture)

  • Energy therapies: Balancing energy fields (e.g., electromagnetic therapy, reiki, qigong)

Some cultural groups subscribe to the hot/cold theory of disease, which argues that illnesses are the result of bodily imbalances and that foods and alternative medications are inherently "hot" or "cold." Pain is considered a "cold" disease, and some patients who adhere to traditional healing will take this into account when selecting and adhering to treatment approaches [142].

INTERPROFESSIONAL COLLABORATION AND PRACTICE

Pain is a multidimensional problem. To facilitate greater quality and more efficient care, care plans should be synchronized and carefully coordinated among the entire healthcare team. Pain is still poorly understood, and pain education has been fragmented in the different health care professions [179]. Caring for patients in pain requires a collaborative interprofessional team approach, with every provider contributing their unique skills, competence and roles. In addition to physicians, nurses, physiotherapists, dentists, pharmacists, occupational therapists, and mental/behavioral health professionals, alternative and complementary practitioners, spiritual healers, and cultural experts all play a key role when working with diverse patients experiencing pain.

The IASP has recognized the importance of interprofessional practice and learning in providing care to patients in pain. They developed an interprofessional pain curriculum that recommends topics and content for students in health professions in their pre-licensure programs [179]. There are four main components of the curriculum: multidimensional nature of pain; pain assessment and measurement; pain management; and pain-specific clinical conditions [179].

CONCLUSION

With the expanding multicultural diversity of the United States, it is imperative that culturally competent care for pain assessment and management become the backbone in practice. In order to establish trust with patients, practitioners should be attuned to the fact that pain is a multifaceted biopsychosocial issue and the meanings of pain and suffering are embedded in a sociocultural context. As such, it is necessary to take into account the role of culture in patients' experiences and expressions of pain. Culture will also influence the treatment sought, what treatment is considered acceptable, and help-seeking behaviors. This underscores the importance of being able to deliver culturally competent pain care.

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