Abstract

BackgroundRates of chronic pain are rising sharply in the United States and worldwide. Presently, there is evidence of racial disparities in pain treatment and treatment outcomes in the United States but few interventions designed to address these disparities. There is growing consensus that chronic musculoskeletal pain is best addressed by a biopsychosocial approach that acknowledges the role of psychological and environmental factors, some of which differ by race.Methods/DesignThe primary aim of this randomized controlled trial is to test the effectiveness of a non-pharmacological, self-regulatory intervention, administered proactively by telephone, at improving pain outcomes and increasing walking among African American patients with hip, back and knee pain. Participants assigned to the intervention will receive a telephone counselor delivered pedometer-mediated walking intervention that incorporates action planning and motivational interviewing. The intervention will consist of 6 telephone counseling sessions over an 8–10 week period. Participants randomly assigned to Usual Care will receive an informational brochure and a pedometer. The primary outcome is chronic pain-related physical functioning, assessed at 6 months, by the revised Roland and Morris Disability Questionnaire, a measure recommended by the Initiative on Methods, Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials (IMMPACT). We will also examine whether the intervention improves other IMMPACT-recommended domains (pain intensity, emotional functioning, and ratings of overall improvement). Secondary objectives include examining whether the intervention reduces health care service utilization and use of opioid analgesics and whether key contributors to racial/ethnic disparities targeted by the intervention mediate improvement in chronic pain outcomes Measures will be assessed by mail and phone surveys at baseline, three months, and six months. Data analysis of primary aims will follow intent-to-treat methodology.DiscussionWe will tailor our intervention to address key contributors to racial pain disparities and examine the effects of the intervention on important pain treatment outcomes for African Americans with chronic musculoskeletal pain.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01983228. Registered 6 November 2013.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThere is evidence of racial disparities in pain treatment and treatment outcomes in the United States but few interventions designed to address these disparities

  • Rates of chronic pain are rising sharply in the United States and worldwide

  • The specific study aims are: Primary Aims: To test the hypothesis that compared to Usual Care (UC), a proactively delivered walking intervention targeted to African American Veterans affairs (VA) patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain will: (1)improve pain-related physical functioning, (2)improve emotional functioning, pain intensity, and ratings of overall improvement

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Summary

Introduction

There is evidence of racial disparities in pain treatment and treatment outcomes in the United States but few interventions designed to address these disparities. Rates of chronic pain has been rising in the US, and are expected to continue to rise [1] This is worrisome because chronic pain is associated with poorer self-reported health status, worse mental health, lower levels of employment, and higher use of medical services [1]. There is evidence of racial and ethnic disparities in pain in the United States but few interventions designed to address these disparities [1,2,3]. We consider racial/ethnic disparities in pain to be a type of health disparity, defined as a difference in health status that systematically and negatively impacts racial/ethnic minority groups [4]. We focus on African American/white disparities in pain, there are differences found for other racial/ethnic minority groups [1]

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