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Race, Gender, and Primary Language Were Not Associated With Changes in Opioid Prescribing in Children: Results From a Single Institution, 2010 to 2020.
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research ( IF 4.2 ) Pub Date : 2022-09-20 , DOI: 10.1097/corr.0000000000002414
Brian Bentzlin Begley 1 , Katherine Sienna Cerniglia 1 , Mones Mohammed Aboelatta 1 , Lubna Begum 1 , Grace Gilbert 1 , Justin Mathew 1 , Stephen Raymond Meixner 1 , Corinna Catherine Franklin 2 , Rey Natividad Ramirez 1
Affiliation  

Patients should be prescribed medication based on their medical condition, without prejudice because of their race, gender, or primary language. However, previous research has shown that men are prescribed more medication than women, patients who are White are prescribed more medications than patients who are non-White, and English-speaking people are prescribed more medications than non-English-speaking patients. However, it is unclear whether these differences also occur in pediatric orthopaedic populations.

中文翻译:


种族、性别和主要语言与儿童阿片类药物处方的变化无关:单一机构的结果,2010 年至 2020 年。



应根据患者的医疗状况为其开药,不得因种族、性别或主要语言而产生偏见。然而,之前的研究表明,男性比女性开出更多的药物,白人患者比非白人患者开出更多的药物,讲英语的人比非英语患者开出更多的药物。然而,尚不清楚这些差异是否也发生在儿科骨科人群中。
更新日期:2022-09-20
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