| Literature DB >> 29682130 |
Anke Samulowitz1, Ida Gremyr2, Erik Eriksson2, Gunnel Hensing1.
Abstract
Background: Despite the large body of research on sex differences in pain, there is a lack of knowledge about the influence of gender in the patient-provider encounter. The purpose of this study was to review literature on gendered norms about men and women with pain and gender bias in the treatment of pain. The second aim was to analyze the results guided by the theoretical concepts of hegemonic masculinity and andronormativity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29682130 PMCID: PMC5845507 DOI: 10.1155/2018/6358624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Res Manag ISSN: 1203-6765 Impact factor: 3.037
Included articles, sorted by type of journal and type of study design.
| Number of articles | Included articles | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Journals specialized in pain | 32 | Fillingim et al. [ |
| Social sciences | 6 | O'brien et al. [ |
| Psychology | 6 | Hale et al. [ |
| Rehabilitation | 5 | Ahlsen et al. [ |
| Musculoskeletal care | 4 | Leresche [ |
| Qualitative health studies | 3 | Paulson et al. [ |
| Men's health | 2 | Keogh [ |
| Women's health | 2 | Hamberg et al. [ |
| Elderly | 3 | Clarke and Bennett [ |
| Emergency medicine | 3 | Lord et al. [ |
| Caring sciences | 2 | Stenberg et al. [ |
| Internal medicine | 2 | Barsky et al. [ |
| Other medical | 3 | Hurley and Adams [ |
| Other | 4 | Hoffmann and Tarzian [ |
|
| ||
|
| ||
| Quantitative | 33 | Robinson et al. [ |
| Qualitative | 21 | Clarke and Bennett [ |
| Mixed methods | 2 | Bernardes et al. [ |
| Review | 15 | Fillingim et al. [ |
| Commentary | 3 | Solimeo [ |
| Theory development | 2 | Pujal and Mora [ |
| Feature | 1 | Jarrett [ |
Theoretical categories, substantive categories, and referenced articles; 77 articles reviewed.
| Theoretical category | Substantive category | References |
|---|---|---|
| Gendered norms about men and women with pain | Stoic men | Fillingim et al. [ |
| Sensitive women—in comparison | Fillingim et al. [ | |
| Hysterical women | Barsky et al. [ | |
| Inexplicable—unfit | Bernardes et al. [ | |
|
| ||
| Gendered norms about how men and women cope with pain | Men's gender identity in jeopardy | Clarke and Bennett [ |
| The strong body | Hoffmann and Tarzian [ | |
| Men's approach—this is not me | Ahlsen et al. [ | |
| The female patchwork | Hoffmann and Tarzian [ | |
| Women's approach—I have to learn | Fillingim et al. [ | |
|
| ||
| Gender bias in the treatment of pain | Struggle for legitimacy | Ahlsen et al. [ |
| How do I look? (appearances) | Fillingim et al. [ | |
| Differences in medication | Fillingim et al. [ | |
Medically inexplicable pain conditions. List of classification terms and references among 77 articles reviewed.
| Classification | Reference |
|---|---|
| Pain without organic, observable, and objective symptoms | Bernardes et al. [ |
| Pain without obvious cause | Bernardes et al. [ |
| Medically unexplained symptoms | Barsky et al. [ |
| Diagnoses of nonspecific symptoms and signs | Hamberg et al. [ |
| Nonspecific symptom diagnoses | Hamberg et al. [ |
| Chronic pain with unclear cause | Jarrett [ |
| Disorders in the absence of organic lesions | Katz et al. [ |
| Conditions, typically chronic, where no pathology can be identified in biomedical terms on diagnostic investigation | Grace [ |
| Somatically experienced health problems that have no corresponding pathology | Grace [ |
| Pain without objectively verifiable evidence of a somatic disease | Grace [ |
| Pain without organic pathology | Grace [ |
| A cluster of common and troubling symptoms (e.g., pain, fatigue, and mood irregularities) that are not attributable to any organic abnormality | Barker [ |
| Disorders with a lack of conventional biomedical evidence | Barker [ |
| Medically unexplained disorders | Werner et al. [ |
| Pain in the absence of “objective” diagnostic evidence of pathology | Bernardes and Lima [ |
| Chronic pain without organic cause | Pujal and Mora [ |
| Chronic nonmalignant pain | Skuladottir and Halldorsdottir [ |
| “Medically unexplained symptoms” | Tait et al. [ |
| Pain in the absence of diagnostic evidence of pathology | Bernardes et al. [ |