Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 12
pro vyhledávání: '"Tracy M. Anastas"'
Publikováno v:
Annals of Behavioral Medicine. 57:288-300
Background Prior work suggests that people experiencing homelessness (PEH) are at heightened risk for developing pain and have a uniquely burdensome pain experience. Purpose The aim of this scoping review was to map the current peer-reviewed, publish
Autor:
Tracy M. Anastas, Adam T. Hirsh, Patrick D. Quinn, Megan M. Miller, Alexis D Grant, Benjamin Lok
Publikováno v:
Pain
Little is known about the factors that influence providers' perceptions of patient risk for aberrant opioid use. Patient gender may interact with prior opioid misuse to influence these perceptions. We asked 131 physicians to view videos and vignettes
Publikováno v:
Am Psychol
In response to the dual public health crises of chronic pain and opioid use, providers have become more vigilant about assessing patients for risk of opioid-related problems. Little is known about how providers are making these risk assessments. Give
Autor:
Megan M. Miller, Jesse C. Stewart, Kevin L. Rand, Nicole A. Hollingshead, Adam T. Hirsh, Tracy M. Anastas
Publikováno v:
Ann Behav Med
BackgroundCompared to White and high socioeconomic status (SES) patients, Black and low SES patients receive less adequate pain care. Providers may contribute to these disparities by making biased decisions that are driven, in part, by their attitude
Autor:
Michael E. Robinson, Adam T. Hirsh, Benjamin Lok, Nicole A. Hollingshead, Stephanie Carnell, Megan M. Miller, Chenghao Chu, Ying Zhang, Kurt Kroenke, Leslie Ashburn-Nardo, Tracy M. Anastas
Publikováno v:
Pain. 160:2229-2240
We conducted a randomized controlled trial of an individually tailored, virtual perspective-taking intervention to reduce race and socioeconomic status (SES) disparities in providers' pain treatment decisions. Physician residents and fellows (n = 436
Publikováno v:
J Pain
Chronic pain is a leading cause of work absenteeism and disability compensation. Previous work demonstrates that patients with chronic illness often seek advice, such as whether or not to pursue disability benefits, from peers with similar health con
Publikováno v:
Pain
Race disparities in pain care are well-documented. Given that most black patients are treated by white providers, patient-provider racial discordance is one hypothesized contributor to these disparities. Research and theory suggest that providers' tr
Publikováno v:
Pain Reports
PAIN Reports, Vol 3, Iss 6, p e700 (2018)
PAIN Reports, Vol 3, Iss 6, p e700 (2018)
Introduction:. Chronic pain in late adolescence and young adults is understudied and poorly characterized. Objectives:. We sought to characterize key variables that may impact pain interference in late adolescents and young adults with chronic pain,
Autor:
Adam T. Hirsh, Zina Trost, Kaitlyn T. Walsh, L. Goubert, L. de Ruddere, Megan M. Miller, Tracy M. Anastas
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Pain. 20:S50-S51
Prior work suggests that providers are influenced by patient race and weight when making pain-related decisions. Providers with stronger implicit (automatic) attitudes about race and weight may be more likely to be influenced by these patient-level c
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Pain. 20:S26
Decision-making in chronic pain care requires synthesizing complex information from many sources. Treatment guidelines have been described as “unclear and confusing,” which can lead to inconsistent pain care, non-clinically relevant information i