ACOMS Review - Summer 2018 ACOMS Review July 2018 | Page 7

10 Strategies to Address Bias in Pain Management Laura M. Cascella, MA Bias in pain management is an ongoing and complex issue in healthcare. Research has shown disparities in pain management in relation to race, ethnicity, gender, and socioeconomic status. Complicating matters, many instances of bias are implicit, creating a need not only to address the bias, but also to raise awareness of its existence. Recognizing and addressing bias are imperative. Failure to treat pain or poorly treated pain can interfere with how patients recover from illnesses and procedures, which can potentially cascade into numerous patient safety and financial consequences, such as increased morbidity, hospitalizations and readmissions, and liability exposure. Additionally, bias in pain treatment may lead to misdiagnosis, unnecessary patient suffering, lack of patient trust in healthcare providers, communication lapses, and failure to provide patient-centered care. 1 Researchers have studied and proposed a variety of techniques to reduce bias in pain management, and many addressing discrimination OMS are takin g steps to acknowledge and address this 3. Developing a protocol issue. Some strategies that to investigate reports of have been recommended at discrimination or unfair the institutional level include: policies/practices 1. Administering the Implicit Association Test (IAT) 4. Supporting provider and staff training that raises to assess subconscious awareness about bias in feelings, attitudes, and thoughts among providers healthcare and teaches strategies that support that may contribute to stereotypes and bias in health equality treatment decisions 5. Leveraging data capabilities to monitor 2. Surveying providers and staff to better understand and compare patient how they perceive the treatment and outcomes by race, gender, and organization’s policies socioeconomic indicators and actions related to improving diversity and