Based on the information provided, which is the observed disparity in the study conducted at Emory? That a greater proportion of Black patients received no medication for pain during treatment when compared to White patients at an Atlanta hospital. That both Black and Hispanic patients have similar pain associated with long-bone fracture injury at two different hospitals in the US. That 127 Black patients are experiencing long-bone fractures at an Atlanta hospital. That many Black patients seek care at urban hospitals.

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Chapter1: The Human Body: An Orientation
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In 1993, Dr Knox Todd, an emergency physician on the medical staff of the UCLA Emergency Center in Los Angeles, reported study findings on a pain study. In
the study, they looked at treatment given to all emergency department patients at UCLA between the ages of 15 and 55 over a two-year period for the treatment of
an isolated long-bone fracture to arm or leg. They selected this injury because it is one of the most consistently painful. The patients had no other serious injuries.
Given the community served, these patients were either Hispanic (31 patients) or White (108 patients). They found:
- 17 of the 31 Hispanic patients (55%) received no medication for pain during treatment
- 28 of the 108 White patients (26%) received no medication for pain during treatment
Many professional colleagues criticized the study and suggested that different ethnic groups respond to pain differently. That Hispanic patients may be more stoic
in the face of their injury, expressing fewer symptoms of pain to their physician than White patients. Dr. Todd later joined the faculty of Emory University in Atlanta,
Georgia. There, he was able to repeat his earlier study in a large, inner-city community hospital in 2000. He evaluated records of 217 individuals presenting to the
emergency room for treatment of an isolated long-bone fracture (no other serious injuries) over 40 months. This included 127 Black and 90 White patients. They
found that:
- 54 of the 107 Black patients (43%) received no medication for pain during treatment
- 23 of the 90 White patients (26%) received no medication for pain during treatment
Because of feedback on the prior study, the investigators were sure to document the extent to which the patents expressed painful symptoms. They found that
54% of the Black patients and 59% of the White patients expressed painful symptoms.
Based on the information provided, which is the observed disparity in the study conducted at Emory?
That a greater proportion of Black patients received no medication for pain during treatment when compared to White patients at an Atlanta hospital.
That both Black and Hispanic patients have similar pain associated with long-bone fracture injury at two different hospitals in the US.
That 127 Black patients are experiencing long-bone fractures at an Atlanta hospital.
That many Black patients seek care at urban hospitals.
Transcribed Image Text:In 1993, Dr Knox Todd, an emergency physician on the medical staff of the UCLA Emergency Center in Los Angeles, reported study findings on a pain study. In the study, they looked at treatment given to all emergency department patients at UCLA between the ages of 15 and 55 over a two-year period for the treatment of an isolated long-bone fracture to arm or leg. They selected this injury because it is one of the most consistently painful. The patients had no other serious injuries. Given the community served, these patients were either Hispanic (31 patients) or White (108 patients). They found: - 17 of the 31 Hispanic patients (55%) received no medication for pain during treatment - 28 of the 108 White patients (26%) received no medication for pain during treatment Many professional colleagues criticized the study and suggested that different ethnic groups respond to pain differently. That Hispanic patients may be more stoic in the face of their injury, expressing fewer symptoms of pain to their physician than White patients. Dr. Todd later joined the faculty of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. There, he was able to repeat his earlier study in a large, inner-city community hospital in 2000. He evaluated records of 217 individuals presenting to the emergency room for treatment of an isolated long-bone fracture (no other serious injuries) over 40 months. This included 127 Black and 90 White patients. They found that: - 54 of the 107 Black patients (43%) received no medication for pain during treatment - 23 of the 90 White patients (26%) received no medication for pain during treatment Because of feedback on the prior study, the investigators were sure to document the extent to which the patents expressed painful symptoms. They found that 54% of the Black patients and 59% of the White patients expressed painful symptoms. Based on the information provided, which is the observed disparity in the study conducted at Emory? That a greater proportion of Black patients received no medication for pain during treatment when compared to White patients at an Atlanta hospital. That both Black and Hispanic patients have similar pain associated with long-bone fracture injury at two different hospitals in the US. That 127 Black patients are experiencing long-bone fractures at an Atlanta hospital. That many Black patients seek care at urban hospitals.
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