Language and gender barriers to pain control after general surgery

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Abstract

Background: Effective pain control is crucial to postoperative recovery and is affected by biopsychosocial factors. This study aimed to evaluate how non-English primary language, gender, and marital status may influence pain, length of stay, and mortality after general surgery. Methods: Consecutive general surgical admissions over a two-year period to two tertiary hospitals were included. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were conducted to evaluate the relationship between non-English primary language, gender, and marital status, and pain scores, length of stay, and in-hospital mortality. Explanatory variables that were controlled for in these analyses included age, birth country, whether a religion was specified, socioeconomic percentile, Charlson comorbidity index, and time of admission. Results: A total of 12 846 general surgery patients were included. When controlling for the aforementioned variables, including having a specified religion and being born overseas, having a non-English primary language was significantly independently associated with lower pain scores (odds ratio 0.61, 95% CI 0.52–0.71, P < 0.001). Female gender was independently associated with an increased likelihood of higher pain scores (odds ratio 1.09, 95% CI 1.01–1.18, P = 0.024) and a lower likelihood of prolonged length of stay (odds ratio 0.88, 95% CI 0. 80–0.95, P = 0.002). None of the evaluated variables had a statistically significant association with in-hospital mortality. Conclusions: This study is the first to characterize an association between general surgery patients with a non-English primary language and lower levels of postoperative pain. It was also found that female gender was associated with higher postoperative pain but lower length of hospital stay.

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Kovoor, J. G., Bacchi, S., Stretton, B., Lam, L., Jiang, M., Gupta, A. K., & Maddern, G. J. (2023). Language and gender barriers to pain control after general surgery. ANZ Journal of Surgery, 93(1–2), 104–107. https://doi.org/10.1111/ans.18164

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