African American Young Adults' Pain and Pain Reduction Strategies.

Pain Manag Nurs

School of Nursing, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut. Electronic address:

Published: October 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Effective pain management is crucial for young adults to prevent chronic pain, especially among African American youths.
  • A survey of 94 African Americans aged 18-25 revealed moderate pain levels, with common complaints in the back and head, yet nearly half reported no self-management strategies.
  • Educating this demographic about effective pain management techniques could help alleviate pain and lessen the risk of developing chronic conditions in the future.

Article Abstract

Background: Effective acute pain management strategies are important for young adults in order to reduce risk for transition to chronic pain.

Aim: To describe pain and pain self-management strategies used by African American young adults.

Design & Setting: A national online cross-sectional survey design was used.

Participant/subjects: Ninety-four African Americans Qualtrics panelists ages 18-25 who reported previous experience with acute pain responded. Methods: Respondents completed the Brief Pain Inventory Short Form to describe their pain intensity, pain interference with function, pain self-management, and percent of relief obtained from their self-management.

Results: African American young adults reported pain primarily in the back (n = 22, 23.4%) and head (n = 19, 20.2%), with moderate pain intensity M = 4.5 (standard deviation [SD] = 1.79) and pain interference with function M = 4.6 (SD = 2.36). African American young adults described their worst pain in the last 24 hours as M = 5.7 (SD = 2.01), least pain as M = 3.4 (SD = 2.41), and average pain as M = 5.1 (SD = 2.09). They reported 61.3% pain relief from self-treatment. A total of 45 (47.9%) reported no pain self-management strategies.

Conclusions: African American young adults report moderate levels of pain intensity and pain interference with function. A significant number report no pain self-management strategies. Focused pain assessment and education about efficacious pain self-management strategies, both pharmacological and complementary, could assist young African Americans to reduce their pain and risk of chronic pain in the future.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pmn.2020.05.004DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pain
25
african american
20
american young
20
pain self-management
20
young adults
16
self-management strategies
12
pain intensity
12
pain interference
12
interference function
12
pain pain
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!