Premium
This is an archive article published on January 2, 2008

‘Whites in US more likely than minorities to get narcotics’

A study reveals that minorities in US are less likely to be prescribed narcotics for pain than their native conterparts.

.

Emergency room doctors in the United States are prescribing strong narcotics more often to patients who complain of pain, but minorities are less likely to get them than whites, a new study finds.

Even for the severe pain of kidney stones, minorities were prescribed narcotics such as oxycodone and morphine less frequently than whites.

The analysis of more than 150,000 emergency room visits over 13 years found differences in prescribing by race and ethnicity in both urban and rural hospitals, in all US regions and for every type of pain.

Story continues below this ad

“The gaps between whites and nonwhites have not appeared to close at all,” said study co-author Mark Pletcher of the University of California, San Francisco.

The study appears on Wednesday’s Journal of the American Medical Association. Prescribing narcotics for pain in emergency rooms rose during the study, from 23 per cent of those complaining of pain in 1993 to 37 per cent in 2005.

The increase coincided with changing attitudes among doctors who now regard pain management as a key to healing.

Doctors in accredited hospitals must ask patients about pain, just as they monitor vital signs such as temperature and pulse.

Story continues below this ad

Even with the increase, the racial gap endured. Linda Simoni-Wastila of the University of Maryland, Baltimore, School of Pharmacy said the race gap finding may reveal some doctors’ suspicions that minority patients could be drug abusers lying about pain to get narcotics.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement