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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Ethnic Variability In The Treatment Of Pain, Rafael A. Ortega, Benjamin A. Youdelman, Richard C. Havel
Ethnic Variability In The Treatment Of Pain, Rafael A. Ortega, Benjamin A. Youdelman, Richard C. Havel
Department of Surgery Faculty Papers
Ethnicity has been shown to be an important determinant of behavior during illness, particularly when a painful condition is present. Studies have shown that pain may be undertreated among different ethnic groups of patients. Whereas individual variations in the reaction to pain occur, available data do not support racial and/or ethnic differences in the perception of pain, leaving no justification for this discrepancy in treatment. Regardless of ethnicity, inadequate treatment of pain has been known for some time and has been referred to in recent literature as "oligoanalgesia." Lack of understanding of different ethnic and cultural groups can lead to …
Oncolog, Volume 44, Number 11, November 1999, Beth Notzon, Dawn Chalaire, Rhonda L. Moore Phd
Oncolog, Volume 44, Number 11, November 1999, Beth Notzon, Dawn Chalaire, Rhonda L. Moore Phd
OncoLog MD Anderson's Report to Physicians (All issues)
- Overcoming Side Effects: Department of Internal Medicine Specialties Finds Ways to Continue Critical Treatments
- Partners in Knowledge, News in Cancer: P.I.K.N.I.C. Program Brings Physicians, Patients Together
- House Call: CIS: Answering the Call for Help
- Advances in Control of Nausea, Vomiting Aim to Reduce 'Misery Quotient'
- DiaLog: Finding Meaning in Stories of Pain and Suffering, by Rhonda L. Moore, PhD, Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Epidemiology
- Protocols: Side Effects of Cancer and Cancer Treatments Are the Subject of Clinical Investigations