ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月11日 12時57分


While an epidemic of prescription opioid abuse has swept across the U.S., African-Americans and Hispanics have been affected at much lower rates than whites. Yet there is a persistent (and complex) problem in American healthcare: African-Americans and other minorities tend to receive less treatment for pain, and suffer more disability as a result. Researchers say minority patients use fewer opioids, perhaps because of a lack of insurance coverage, as well as what seems to be a greater reluctance to take opioid painkillers. But researchers have also found evidence of racial bias and stereotyping in recognizing and treating pain among minorities, particularly black patients. @ilanapl photographed Dr. Toya Burton, a chiropractor at a Whatley Health Services clinic in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, treating Robert Prince for pain. The clinic was a partner in a study of low-income patients that looked at how therapy relieved pain compared with only medical treatment. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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