Date

Mar 2024

Type

Publication

Attendees

Attending to Marginalization in The Chronic Pain Literature: A Scoping Review

Date

Mar 2024

Type

Publication

Location

Attendees

Authors

Laura Connoy, Michelle Solomon, Riana Longo, Abhimanyu Sud, Joel Katz, Craig Dale, Meagan Stanley, Fiona Webster

Citation

Connoy L, Solomon M, Longo R, Sud A, Katz J, Dale C, Stanley M, Webster F. Attending to Marginalization in The Chronic Pain Literature: A Scoping Review. Can J Pain. 2024 Mar 28;8(2):2335500. doi: 10.1080/24740527.2024.2335500. PMID: 38831969; PMCID: PMC11146439.

Abstract

Background: There has been a recent and, for many within the chronic pain space, long-overdue increase in literature that focuses on equity, diversity, inclusion, and decolonization (EDI-D) to understand chronic pain among people who are historically and structurally marginalized.

Aims: In light of this growing attention in chronic pain research, we undertook a scoping review of studies that focus on people living with chronic pain and marginalization to map how these studies were carried out, how marginalization was conceptualized and operationalized by researchers, and identify suggestions for moving forward with marginalization and EDI-D in mind to better support people living with chronic pain.

Methods: We conducted this scoping review using critical analysis in a manner that aligns with dominant scoping review frameworks and recent developments made to scoping review methodology as well as reporting guidelines.

Results: Drawing on 67 studies, we begin with a descriptive review of the literature followed by a critical review that aims to identify fissures within the field through the following themes: (1) varying considerations of sociopolitical and socioeconomic contexts, (2) conceptual conflations between sex and gender, and (3) differing approaches to how people living with chronic pain and marginalization are described.

Conclusion: By identifying strengths and limitations in the research literature, we aim to highlight opportunities for researchers to contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of marginalization in chronic pain experiences.

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