Article

Intersectionality as a theoretical framework for researching health inequities in chronic pain

Details

Citation

Macgregor C, Walumbe J, Tulle E, Seenan C & Blane DN (2023) Intersectionality as a theoretical framework for researching health inequities in chronic pain. British Journal of Pain, 17 (5), pp. 479-490. https://doi.org/10.1177/20494637231188583

Abstract
Chronic pain is experienced unequally by different population groups; we outline examples from the pain literature of inequities related to gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic and migration status. Health inequities are systematic, avoidable and unfair differences in health outcomes between groups of people, with the fundamental ‘causes of causes’ recognised as unequal distribution of income, power and wealth. Intersectionality can add further theory to health inequities literature; collective social identities including class/socioeconomic status, race/ethnicity, gender, migration status, age, sexuality and disabled status intersect in multiple interconnected systems of power leading to differing experiences of privilege and oppression which can be understood as axes of health inequities. The process of knowledge creation in pain research is shaped by these interconnected systems of power, and may perpetuate inequities in pain care as it is largely based on majority white, middle class, Eurocentric populations. Intersectionality can inform research epistemology (ways of knowing), priorities, methodology and methods. We give examples from the literature where intersectionality has informed a justice oriented approach across different research methods and we offer suggestions for further development. The use of a reductionist frame can force unachievable objectivity on to complex health concepts, and we note increasing realisation in the field of the need to understand the individuals within their social world, and recognise the fluid and contextual nature of this.

Keywords
intersectionality; health inequalities; chronic pain; theory; epistemology; pain care; equity; health inequities

Journal
British Journal of Pain: Volume 17, Issue 5

StatusPublished
FundersGlasgow Caledonian University and NHS Lanarkshire
Publication date31/10/2023
Publication date online31/07/2023
Date accepted by journal15/05/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37371
PublisherSAGE Publications
ISSN2049-4637
eISSN2049-4645

People (1)

Dr Christopher Seenan

Dr Christopher Seenan

Senior Lecturer in Physiotherapy, Sport

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