• J Pain · Sep 2024

    Improving Pain Management for Marginalized Communities: Educating the Next Generation of Healthcare Professionals.

    • Aimee K Hildenbrand, Lonna P Gordon, and Katherine S Salamon.
    • Center for Healthcare Delivery Science, Nemours Children's Health, Wilmington, Delaware; Division of Behavioral Health, Nemours Children's Health, Wilmington, Delaware; Department of Pediatrics, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Electronic address: Aimee.Hildenbrand@nemours.org.
    • J Pain. 2024 Sep 24: 104683104683.

    AbstractInadequately managed pain has immense negative impacts on children, families, health care systems, and societies. Historically and presently, inadequately treated pain disproportionally affects marginalized communities. Deficiencies in pain education for health care providers are widely recognized as a leading contributor to poorly managed pain. Existing training for providers prioritizes physiological systems and pharmacological interventions for pain, despite decades of evidence supporting the biopsychosocial model and interdisciplinary treatment of pain. Moreover, education for health care providers rarely acknowledges the role of bias, prejudice, and systemic racism in perpetuating disparities in pain care. To address this gap, we sought to develop an innovative curriculum for health care teams to combat racial injustice related to pain management. This curriculum was developed and refined collaboratively with community partners representing diverse expertise, including lived experiences of pain, interdisciplinary pain management, cultural humility and authentic allyship, and curriculum development and evaluation. Four modules delivered across 1 to 2 hours were developed and pilot-tested extensively with multidisciplinary providers across a large pediatric health system. Learner feedback indicated high acceptability and informed iterative changes to the curriculum. Additional research is needed to examine impacts of the curriculum on health care provider knowledge and behavior (eg, clinical decision-making) and patient-reported outcomes as well as to test dissemination and implementation strategies. PERSPECTIVE: We present the development and evaluation of a curriculum for health care professionals to combat racial injustice in pain management. By engaging diverse community partners, using design thinking, applying an antiracist lens, and designing for dissemination, we aim to equip the next generation of providers to deliver equitable pain care.Copyright © 2024 United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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