| Literature DB >> 28088505 |
Barbara J Turner1, Yuanyuan Liang2, Natalia Rodriguez3, Melissa A Valerio4, Andrea Rochat3, Jennifer S Potter5, Paula Winkler6.
Abstract
Educating the general public about chronic pain and its care is a national health priority. We evaluated knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs (KAB) of a 5-state, population-based sample of Hispanic individuals aged 35 to 75 years without chronic pain, representing more than 8.8 million persons. A Web-based survey assessed KAB using an adapted version of the Survey of Pain Attitudes-Brief and self-reported knowledge about chronic pain (nothing, a little, a lot). In unweighted analyses of participants (N = 349), the mean age was 52.0 (±10.6) years, 54% were women, 53% preferred Spanish, and 39% did not graduate from high school. More participants reported knowing nothing about chronic pain (24%) than a lot (12%). In weighted logistic models with knowing nothing as the reference, knowing a lot was associated with greater KAB for chronic pain-related emotions, functioning, and cure (all P < .01) but poorer KAB about pain medications (P < .001). Associations were similar for those knowing a little. Men and women preferring Spanish had poorer KAB about pain medications than men preferring English (both P < .001). In view of Hispanic individuals' disparities in chronic pain care, these data underscore the need for effective public educational campaigns about chronic pain. PERSPECTIVE: In this 5-state representative sample of Hispanic individuals without chronic pain, one-quarter reported knowing nothing about chronic pain and had poorer KAB about multiple aspects of this disease. This study reinforces the need to evaluate and address gaps in the general public's knowledge about chronic pain.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic pain; Hispanic; knowledge attitudes beliefs; representative sample
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28088505 PMCID: PMC6023619 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2016.12.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain ISSN: 1526-5900 Impact factor: 5.820