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Black Patients with Chronic Pain less likely
to have Obesity assessed
Newswise — At the
intersection of two U.S. health epidemics –
obesity and chronic pain – researchers from
the University of Michigan Health System
found black patients with chronic pain were
less likely to have their weight or body
mass index (BMI) recorded, even though they
are at higher risk for having obesity when
compared with their white counterparts.
This new study also revealed
that obesity is related to greater
disability and poorer functioning, over and
above the impact of a person’s pain level.
Obesity contributes to
chronic pain and several other chronic
conditions, leading to decreased health and
quality of life.
Chronic pain also leads to
decreased health and quality of life, says
senior author Carmen R. Green, M.D.
Disparities in the chronic pain experience
and obesity exist, with blacks more likely
to be negatively impacted, she notes.
Black people also are more
likely to experience disability and lower
physical functioning than white people, when
faced with chronic pain, says Green,
associate professor of anesthesiology and
health management and policy, and director
of Pain Medicine Research at the U-M Medical
School and School of Public Health.
The study appears in the
Journal of Pain.
“Assessing a patient’s weight
and height is necessary to calculate BMI.
Once assessed, a dialogue can begin between
the patient and health care team to address
obesity,” Green says.
“These findings provide
further evidence of the negative effect
obesity, measured via BMI, can have on a
person’s overall health and well-being in
general and on chronic pain in particular.
“This is a reminder about the
importance of assessing height and weight
and measuring BMI in patients with chronic
pain, especially minorities.”
However, the goal is made
more difficult because black patients are
less likely to have their BMI assessed, the
study found.
“Both chronic pain and
obesity are reaching epidemic proportions.
Considering their public health implications
in terms of disability, BMI should be
regularly assessed especially in populations
who are at increased risk,” Green says.
It is not clear why it was
less likely black patients would have their
BMI measured, even though they may be at
increased risk for higher BMI and obesity,
researchers say. But they point out that the
gap could indicate a lower quality of care
than what is provided to white patients.
BMI is a measure of body fat
based on height and weight. According to the
National Institutes of Health, people with a
BMI lower than 18.5 are considered
underweight; people between 18.5 and 24.9
are normal weight; people between 25 and
29.9 are overweight; and those with a BMI of
30 or higher are obese.
This table shows the BMI of
people at various weights and heights.
By the
numbers:
Researchers studied 183
people – 92 white and 91 black, 68 men and
115 women, ages 31 to 46. New black patients
attending a pain clinic at U-M were asked to
participate, and were matched with a white
chronic pain patient of the same gender and
similar age.
When the height and weight
was available it was taken from the
electronic medical record. Patients were
asked to indicate on a diagram of the human
body where they were in pain, how long
they’ve been in pain and what caused it.
They also were given
the McGill Pain Questionnaire and the West
Haven Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory
to evaluate the intensity of their pain and
its impact on their life.
The BMI was notably higher
for blacks than whites (31.6 vs. 27.6).
Blacks were less likely to have complete
height and weight data in their records than
whites (73 percent vs. 84 percent). Those
without BMI data had higher pain severity
scores.
In addition to Green, Julia
Caldwell, M.D. and Tamera Hart-Johnson, M.S.
were co-authors of the paper.
AETNA Quality Care Foundation
provided funding for the study.
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